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Full text of "Mireio. A Provencal poem"

UBRAW 
UNIVERSITY Of CALIFOWtt 




Mireio 



IN SAKE SERIES. 

THE LADY FROM THE SEA. 
BY HENRIK ISBEN. 

A LONDON PLANE TREE. 
BY AMY LEVY. 

WORDSWORTH'S GRAVE. 
BY WILLIAM WATSON. 

IPHIGENIA IN DELPHI. 
BY RICHARD GARNETT. 




Mireio. 

A PROVEJVfAl. POEM. 



, , 

FREDERIC MISTRAL. 

Translated ty 

Harriet Waters Preston. 



CAMEO SERIES 



T.FISHER UNW1N PATERNOSTER S$, 
LOJHDONE.C MDCCCXC 






Frontispiece 

by 
JOSEPH PENNELL. 



To Lamartine* 



Te eonsecre Mireio : es moun cor e moun amo, 

Es la flour de mis a. 
Es un raisin de crau qtfemi touto sa ramo, 

Te porge un paisan. 



I offer thee Mireio : it is my heart and spirit, 

The blossom of my years, 

A cluster of Crau grapes, with all the green leaves 
near it, 

To thee a peasant bears. 



Preface to the English Edition. 



THIRTY odd years have come and gone since 
the curious litterateurs of Paris were excited 
and charmed by the apparition of Fre'de'ric 
Mistral's " Mireio." A pastoral poem in twelve 
cantos, composed in the dialect of the Bouches 
du Rhone, and first issued by an obscure bookseller 
at Avignon, it was produced before the great 
literary world with a parallel French version of 
the author's own, very singular and rather sauvage 
as French, but exceedingly bold, picturesque, and 
poetic, and the poem had the further advantage 
of a most eloquent and sympathetic introduction 
in the Revue des Deux Mondes, of September 15, 
1859, by Saint-Rene' Taillandier. 

The employment of a rustic southern dialect for 
the purposes of poetic narrative was by no means 
so unheard-of a thing, even to the men of that 
generation as was indirectly assumed by the first 
reviewer of " Mireio." Had not Jacques Jasmin, 
the immortal barber of Agen, written, in his own 
local patois, " Frangonette," and " The Blind Girl 
of Castel CuilleY' and the inimitable " Papillotes " ? 
But the work of Mistral, along with that of the 
school which he claimed to represent, and of 
which he was easily chief, was heralded by a 



8 PREFACE TO THE ENGLISH EDITION. 

certain fanfare it came with a specific and im- 
pressive claim of ancient Provengal traditions to 
be revived, and a vast future inaugurated : pre- 
tensions which would have seemed almost droll 
to the Gascon Jasmin, with his exquisite humour 
and his adorable simplicity. 

I can do no more than glance in this place at 
the history of the self-styled Provengal Revival, 
the most amibitious and by far the most romantic 
literary adventure of our day. It is an inviting 
subject, and will one day form an interesting 
chapter in the long annals of poesy ; but the 
time is not yet fully come for estimating its 
results, and still less, with its greatest champion 
yet living, for writing its obituary. 

Joseph Roumanille, a schoolmaster of St. Remy, 
near Tarascon, was the father of the movement. 
He first wrote poems in modern Provengal, so the 
pleasant legend says, because his old mother could 
not understand him when he essayed to read 
her those which he had written in French. De- 
lighted, and, as it would seem, a little amazed 
at his own success, he came forward as the rightful 
heir to the long-lapsed inheritance of the Trouba- 
dours, assumed that the language, whose literary 
capacities he had re-discovered, was essentially 
the same as theirs, and contrived thoroughly to 
imbue with his own faith in its future a band of 
clever and ardent pupils, among whom, by the 
will of Heaven, there was one rare genius 
Frederic Mistral, and one wild enthusiast, who 
was, at the same time, an affluent and pathetic 
versifier Thdodore Aubanel. Animated by a 
mystical assurance, hardly less profound than that 
of Loyola and his companions upon Montmartre, 



PREFACE TO THE ENGLISH EDITION. 9 

these knights of song bound themselves by a sort 
of vow, to write in the effete language of the 
French Academy no more. They constituted 
themselves a poetic order, and proceeded to adopt 
an elaborate and somewhat fantastic organization. 
The almost religious earnestness which animated 
them may be judged by the fact that when one of 
the original band, Eugene Garcin formally saluted 
by name, along with some half-dozen others, in 
the sixth canto of " Mireio cooled in his ardour 
a little, and attempted to point out the factitious 
and impracticable side of the movement, he was 
solemnly denounced by Mistral as "the Judas 
of our litttle church." It was a defection of no 
serious moment, and the revival went its fervid 
way without Garcin. 

The Provencal poets agreed to call themselves 
felibrei nobody knows to this day exactly why. 
There are those who say that the word means 
homme de foi fibre, that is, emancipated from all 
slavish literary tradition as Mistral and his first 
associates undoubtedly were ; there are sticklers 
for antiquity and a direct descent from the Latin, 
who maintain the derivation gut facit libros. 
Howbeit the felibre began to publish at Avignon 
in the speech of the district, a periodical, which 
still, I think, appears at irregular intervals. They 
constructed a small grammar on the lines of the 
existing grammars of the ancient " Langue d'oc," 
especially of Raynouard's " Re'sum^ de la Gram- 
maire Romaine," and they began the compilation 
of an extensive dictionary, which has never even 
approached completion. They also revived the in- 
stitution of an annual poetic tournament with floral 
prizes a silver lily, a golden violet where the 



io PREFACE TO THE ENGLISH EDITION. 

native bards recited their verses, and received their 
rewards, after the supposed manner of the olden 
time. These jousts were usually held in the late 
summer or the early autumn. There were others 
appointed for the yet more appropriate month of 
May, which received the name of the feast of the 
Santo Estello, or Holy Star, memotirativo de 2a 
reneissen^o dou Gai-Sabe to commemorate the 
renascence of the Gay Science. Once in seven 
years this feast was to be celebrated with extra- 
ordinary splendour, "in honour" ( I continue to 
quote from the address of Mistral at the Floral 
Games held at Hyeres in 1885) " of the seven rays 
of that mysterious star which leads, whitherso- 
ever God will, our bark with its orange-freight." 
That is to say, which determines, after the manner 
of the Star of Bethlehem, the place where our 
society shall assemble and listen to the pieces 
entered for competition. 

Were it possible for a new language to be 
created, or a decaying one revived, of determinate 
purpose, by native genius, fiery enthusiasm and 
unstinted devotion to the cause, that miracle 
would surely have been wrought by the felibre 
of the Bouches du Rhone. But the triumph of 
a language, like that of the kingdom of heaven, 
is among the things which do not come by 
observation. It is determined by causes as vast 
as those which shape the continents, and quite as 
independent of the theories of individual men. 
The order of the Holy Star, was after all only 
a kind of idealized mutual admiration society, and 
of all its members during a full quarter of a 
century, three names only have advanced from 
local renown to anything like general recognition. 



PREFACE TO THE ENGLISH EDITION, n 

They are the three names already cited of 
Roumanille, Aubanel, and Mistral. 

The two former have already passed away, 
leaving behind them many charming lyrics, but 
no work of universal and lasting interest. Mistral 
is gloriously young at sixty, able, and let us hope 
willing, to give us in that rich and flowing idiom> 
which no one else has ever managed with such 
mastery as he, many more historical and narrative 
poems, vivid with local colour, and teeming with 
local tradition, like " Calendau " a romance of the 
last century, which appeared in 1873 and " Nerto " 
a tale of the time of the Popes at Avignon, pub- 
lished in 1884. But it is safe to prophesy that 
neither Mistral nor any Qihtr felibre will ever give 
us another " Mireio " so spontaneous, artless, and 
impassioned, so dewy with the memories of the 
poet's own childhood on a Provencal farm, or mas, 
so gay with the laughter and moving with the 
tears of simple folk, reflecting in so flawless a 
mirror every change of the seasons, every aspect 
of the free, primitive, bucolic life of the Mediter- 
ranean shore. 

The success of Aubanel was perhaps frustrated 
by the very extravagance of his own aims. When 
we find him at the fetes of Forcalquier in 1875 
apostrophizing the arbiters of literary renown in 
France in terms like these : " Sachez que nous 
sommes un grand peuple, et qu'il n'est plus temps 
de nous me"priser. Trente departements parlent 
notre langue, d'une mer a 1'autre mer, des 
Pyrenees jusqu'aux Alpes, de Crau a Limousin ; 
le meme amour fait battre notre poitrine, 1'amour 
de la terre natale et de la langue maternelle . . . 
Sachez que vous serez tombe"s longtemps alors 



12 PREFACE TO THE ENGLISH EDITION. 

que le Provencal, toujours jeune, parlera encore 
de vous avec pitie" " we can then understand that 
Saint-Rend Tallandier, the original sponsor of 
Mireio, should have made haste to express his 
grave apprehensions for the sanity of the revival- 
ist movement, and to repudiate in the name of 
of the great Review all countenance of so vast a 
pretension on behalf of an " idiom which had 
vanished for six hundred years from the battle- 
field of ideas." 

One is reminded of the lament of the late 
William Barnes that the dialect of Dorset had 
not prevailed in England over the tongue of 
Shakespeare. Yet William Barnes, like \hz felibre, 
wrote poems in the local patois, far more beauti- 
ful and pathetic than any which he ever produced 
in proper English. 

Mistral himself, with the profounder instincts 
and wiser judgment of a really large mind, has 
grown more modest from year to year in his hopes 
concerning the final harvest of that generous enter- 
prise to which his life and powers have been con- 
secrated. He was not quite able to extend a heaity 
welcome to Alphonse Daudet, when that most 
humane and sympathetic of realists appeared upon 
the scene with " Numa Roumestan " and the 
" Lettres de mon Moulin," describing in the most 
pellucid French and with a fidelity equal to his 
own, the prose aspect of the life of the South, and 
all the rustic scenes which Mistral had so affec- 
tionately poetized. All the felibre, indeed, looked 
askance at Daudet as an intruder, and this is one 
more sign, if not of the limitations of their leader's 
genius, at least of the narrow and ephemeral 
character of their collective ideal. However, in an 



PREFACE TO THE ENGLISH EDITION. 13 

address delivered before the previously-mentioned 
assembly at Hyeres in 1885 ten years after 
Aubanel had hurled his fierce defiance at the 
French Academy Mistral might have been heard 
pleading, with much earnestness and good sense, 
that French and Provencal should be kept reso- 
lutely distinct, both in the teaching of the schools, 
and in the talk of the people, and that, by way of 
preserving the purity of both forms of speech. 

His remarks had an especial appropriateness 
then and there, because the prose work crowned 
upon that occasion was a series of naive and highly 
dramatic dialogues, entitled " Scenes de la Vie 
Provengale," by M. C. Se'nes, of Toulon, officially 
known as La Sinse. French of the most barbaric, 
and Provencal of the most pliant, are mixed up in 
these delightfully comic dialogues exactly as they 
are upon the lips of the common folk. It is the 
most amusing, perhaps the only distinctly amusing 
work which the school of the felibre has ever pro- 
duced, and anybody who reads French may read 
and have a hearty laugh over it. And I may add, 
from my own experience, that a very short residence 
in the ancient Provincia is enough to show that the 
local idiom is much more intelligible phonetically 
than it looks at first sight upon paper. 

I may be mistaken, but I take the truth to be 
that modern Provengal is, after all, a dialect only, 
and not, as was so long and passionately claimed 
by the confederate poets, a language. As a matter 
of fact, it resembles the plastic idiom of the ancient 
Troubadours very little more than it resembles 
modern French, and certainly no more than it 
resembles Gascon, Catalan, or the Italian of the 
Western Riviera. All the Romance dialects, how- 



i \ PREFACE TO THE ENGLISH EDITION. 

ever fallen from literary honour, or untamed by 
literary law, are closely akin, and bear marks, even 
in their utmost degradation, of the same illustrious 
pedigree. They are like certain wild flowers, the 
pimpernel, the anemone, whose species can never be 
mistaken, but whose colours present, and that 
spontaneously, an almost infinite variety. 

The poem of " Mireio," in parallel French and 
Provengal, first fell in my way in the summer of 
1871 ; and I admire my own audacity in imme- 
diately attempting to turn it into English verse, 1 
almost as much as I do that of the men who first 
preached the Provengal crusade against the lan- 
guage of Racine and Moliere. Of course I knew 
no more of the idiom in which it was originally 
composed than could be gathered from a close 
comparison of the same with Mistral's own French, 
aided by a smattering of old Provencal. I may 
plead in extenuation of my effrontery that there 
was virtually no more to be known at that time, 
for even the grammar already mentioned had not 
then been published. There is not very much more 
to be known even now. 

The scheme of the Provencal verse, though 
elaborate, and seemingly very artificial, was easily 
enough intelligible to an English ear ; more so, I 
should fancy, than to a Parisian one, on account of 
its obvious jingle or, to speak by the book, the 
exuberance of its rhymes, and the strength of its 
tonic accents. The same remark, as is well known, 
applies in a general way to the songs of the Trou- 
badours. Mistral's stanza consists of five eight- 
syllabled iambic lines with feminine rhymes, in 
groups of two and three, and two twelve-syllabled 

1 Boston, U.S.A., Roberts Bros., 1872. 



PREFACE TO THE ENGLISH EDITION. 15 

iambic lines, with masculine rhymes. The Quaker 
poet Whittier had fallen upon a somewhat similar 
verse, in one of the finest of his earlier poems 
" Lines written at Hampton Beach " : 

" So when Time's veil shall fall asunder, 

The soul may know 
No sudden change, no curious wonder, 
Nor sink the weight of mystery under, 

But with the upward rise, and with the vastness grow.'' 

But this is far simpler than Mistral's. 

I did actually make an attempt to transfer this 
florid measure to our own sober English tongue, 
and that eminent American poet and very dis- 
tinguished connoisseur in poetic metres, the late 
Mr. Longfellow, once told me that he greatly wished 
I had persevered, and that he thought it would 
have been quite possible to render the whole poem 
in the same way. Perhaps it would have been, 
to a master of versification, like himself; and 
for his sake, and out of respect for his opinion, I 
subjoin the opening stanzas of the poem in Pro- 
ven$al, and my own attempt to imitate their metre, 
premising, for the benefit of the unskilled, that in 
Provengal every letter sounds, the vowels as in 
French, while of the consonants g and j before e 
and i are pronounced like ds t and ch always like ts. 
A final vowel is elided, in scanning, before another 
vowel ; and the tonic accent is strongly marked : 

" Cante uno chato de Prouven9o, 

Dins lis amour de la jouven9o, 
A traves da la Crau, vers la mar, dins li bla, 

Umble escoulan d'ou grand Oumero, 

I^u la vole segui. Coume ero 

Ren qu'uno chato de Prouvenso, 
En foro de la Crau se n'es gaire parla. 



1 6 PREFACE TO THE ENGLISH EDITION, 

Emai soun front noun lusiguesse 

Que de jouinesso ; emai n'aguesse 
Ni diademo d'or ni manteu de Damas, 

Vole qu'en glori fugue aussado 

Coune uno reino, e caressado 

Per nosto lengo mespresado 
Car cantan que per vautre, o pastre e gent di mas ! " 

Or thus : 

" A maiden of Provence I sing ; 

I tell the love-tale of her spring, 
Across La Crau's wide wheat-fields follow her to the sea. 

Mine be the daring aspiration 

To sing of her in Homer's fashion, 

My lady of the lowly station, 
Unknown beyond the prairies of lone La Crau was she. 

What though her brow was never crowned 

Save with the youth that rayed it round ? 
What though she bore no golden crown and wore no damask 
cloak? 

Yet I would have her raised in glory 

As a queen is, and set before me 

In our poor speech to tell her story, 
Because I sing for you alone, shepherds and farmer-folk ! " 

To me the thought of keeping this up for twelve 
cantos was simply appalling. Even in my trial 
stanzas, as will be seen, I had sacrificed many of 
the feminine rhymes ; and I am now inclined to 
think, though I speak under correction, that 
Mistral himself and his followers availed them- 
selves pretty liberally of the license which the 
classic Troubadours are well known to have em- 
ployed, of manipulating their final syllables more 
or less in order to make them rhyme. 

The measure finally adopted ten-syllabled 
iambic lines with consecutive rhymes, usually 
masculine but sometimes feminine was essentially 



PREFACE TO THE ENGLISH EDITION. 17 

the same as that employed by William Morris in 
the " Earthly Paradise." That beautiful work was 
then new, and very popular in America, and it 
seemed, and I own that to me it seems still, to 
present almost the ideal of English narrative 
poetry. But I broke my version into stanzas of six 
lines, by way, I suppose, of making it look more 
like the original. 

In those comparatively early days, I also held, and 
rather doated on, a theory of my own about what 
are called imperfect rhymes. I was persuaded that 
rhymes where the consonant sounds correspond 
while the vowel sounds merely approximate like 
"wreck and make, gone and son are the counterpart 
on the one hand of assonances upon the other, in 
which the vowels correspond but not the con- 
sonants ; that their relation to perfect rhymes is 
exactly that of minor to major harmonies, and that 
they relieve the ear in a long-rhymed poem, no less 
than the latter in a musical composition. Though 
very naturally censured for the freedom with which 
I exercised this caprice in my version of " Mireio," I 
still clung to it tenaciously as late as 1880, when I 
made a version of the Georgics of Vergil. I am 
by no means certain even now that there is not 
sound musical justification for the idea, but I have 
grown conservative with years, as we are all apt to 
do, and I cherish an ever-increasing respect for 
law literary and other. In the present edition of 
my " Mireio," I have therefore reformed and, so to 
speak, ranged some scores of these licentious rhymes, 
aiming always, at the same time, at coming closer 
to the meaning of the original, as I now understand 
it, even if need be, at the sacrifice of some pic- 
turesqueness in the English line. 



1 8 PREFACE TO THE ENGLISH EDITION. 

I had always beside me when I first made my 
version, the English prose translation of " Mireio," 
by Mr. C. H. Grant, to which I feel myself to have 
been not a little indebted. In artlessness of nar- 
rative, in vigour and felicity of expression, I have 
never hoped to surpass this unrhymed and un- 
measured version, which needed, as it seemed to 
me, only a rhythmic form to render it worthy of 
the essentially musical original. 

A second English translation, by H. Crichton, 
with which I became acquainted subsequently, had 
been published by Macmillan and Co., London, in 
1868. This version was a metrical one, and fairly 
close, but it failed, I think, in catching, not the 
music merely, but the rural freshness and fragrance, 
the genuinely bucolic spirit of the Provencal. It 
is because, I venture to hope, that my version, with 
all its faults, does reflect something of all this, that 
a new edition of it is offered to the public after so 
long a time. 

HARRIET WATERS PRESTON. 
BRUSSELS, 

l) 1890. 



Contents. 



CANTO PAGE 

I. Lotus Farm . . . . . . 21 

II. The Leaf-Picking 37 

III. The Cocoontng 50 

IV. The Suitors 67 

V. The Battle 81 

VI. The Witch 95 

VII. The Old Men no 

VIII. La Crau 124 

IX. The Muster . . . . . .136 

X. Camargue ...... 147 

XI. The Saints 159 

XII. Death 174 



CANTO I. 

Lotus Farm. 

I SING the love of a Provensal maid ; 
How through the wheat-fields of La Crau she 

strayed, 

Following the fate that drew her to the sea. 
Unknown beyond remote La Crau was she ; 
And I, who tell the rustic tale of her, 
Would fain be Homer's humble follower. 

What though youth's aureole was her only crown ? 
And never gold she wore nor damask gown ? 
I'll build her up a throne out of my song, 
And hail her queen in our despised tongue. 
Mine be the simple speech that ye all know, 
Shepherds and farmer-folk of lone La Crau. 

God of my country, who didst have Thy birth 
Among poor shepherds when Thou wast on earth, 
Breathe fire into my song ! Thou knowest, my God, 
How, when the lusty summer is abroad, 
And figs turn ripe in sun and dew, comes he, 
Brute, greedy man, and quite despoils the tree. 

Yet on that ravaged tree thou savest oft 
Some little branch inviolate aloft, 
Tender and airy up against the blue, 
Which the rude spoiler cannot win unto : 
Only the birds shall come and banquet there, 
When, at St. Magdalene's, the fruit is fair. 



22 MlRfclO. 

Methinks I see yon airy little bough : 

It mocks me with its freshness even now ; 

The light breeze lifts it, and it waves on high 

Fruitage and foliage that cannot die. 

Help me, dear God, on our Proven9al speech, 

To soar until the birds' own home I reach 1 

Once, then, beside the poplar-bordered Rhone, 

There lived a basket-weaver and his son, 

In a poor hut set round with willow-trees 

(For all their humble wares were made from these) ; 

And sometimes they from farm to farm would wend, 

And horses' cribs and broken baskets mend. 

And so one evening, as they trudged their round 

With osier bundles on their shoulders bound, 

" Father," young Vincen said, " the clouds look wild 

About old Magalouno's tower up-piled. 

If that gray rampart fell, 'twould do us harm : 

We should be drenched ere we had gained the farm." 

" Nay, nay ! " the old man said, " no rain to-night ! 
'Tis the sea-breeze that shakes the trees. All right ! 
A western gale were different." Vincen mused : 
" Are many ploughs at Lotus farmstead used ? " 
" Six ploughs 1 " the basket- weaver answered slow : 
" It is the finest freehold in La Crau. 

" Look ! There's their olive-orchard, intermixt 
With rows of vines and almond-trees betwixt. 
The beauty of it is, that vineyard hath 
For every day in all the year a path ! 
There's ne'er another such the beauty is ; 
And in each path are just so many trees." 

" O heavens ! How many hands at harvest-tide 
So many trees must need ! " young Viocen cried. 



LOTUS FARM. 23 

1 ' Nay : for 'tis almost Hallowmas, you know, 
When all the girls come flocking in from Baux, 
And, singing, heap with olives green and dun 
The sheets and sacks, and call it only fun." 

The sun was sinking, as old Ambroi said ; 
On high were little clouds a-flush with red ; 
Sideways upon their yoked cattle rode 
The labourers slowly home, each with his goad 
Erect. Night darkened on the distant moor ; 
'Twas supper-time, the day of toil was o'er. 

" And here we are ! " the boy cried. " I can see 
The straw-heaped threshing-floor, so hasten we ! " 
" But stay ! " the other. " Now, as I'm alive, 
The Lotus Farm's the place for sheep to thrive, 
The pine-woods all the summer, and the sweep 
Of the great plain in winter. Lucky sheep I 

" And look at the great trees that shade the dwelling, 
And look at that delicious stream forth welling 
Inside the vivary ! And mark the bees ! 
Autumn makes havoc in their colonies ; 
But every year, when comes the bright May weather, 
Yon lotus-grove a hundred swarms will gather." 

" And one thing more ! " cried Vincen, eagerly, 
" The very best of all, it seems to me, 
I mean the maiden, father, who dwells here. 
Thou canst not have forgotten how, last year, 
She bade us bring her olive-baskets two, 
And fit her little one with handles new." 

So saying, they drew the farm-house door a-nigh, 

And, in the dewy twilight, saw thereby 

The maid herself. Distaff in hand she stood, 

Watching her silk-worms at their leafy food. 

Then master Ambroi let his osiers fall, 

And sang out cheerily, " Good-even, all ! " 



24 MlREIO. 

" Father, the same to you 1 " the damsel said. 

" I had come out my distaff- point to thread, 

It grows so dark. Whence come you now, I pray ? 

From Valabrego?" Ambroi answered, " Yea. 

I said, when the fast-coming dark I saw, 

' We'll sleep at Lotus Farm upon the straw.' " 

Whereat, with no more words, father and son 
Hard by upon a roller sat them down, 
And fell to their own work right busily. 
A half-made cradle chanced the same to be. 
Fast through the nimble fingers of the two 
The supple osier bent and crossed and flew. 

Certes, our Vincen was a comely lad. 

A bright face and a manly form he had, 

Albeit that summer he was bare sixteen. 

Swart were his cheeks ; but the dark soil, I ween, 

Bears the fine wheat, and black grapes make the wine 

That sets our feet a-dance, our eyes a-shine. 

Full well he knew the osier to prepare, 
And deftly wrought : but ofttimes to his share 
Fell coarser work ; for he the panniers made 
Wherewith the farmers use their beasts to lade, 
And divers kinds of baskets, huge and rough, 
Handy and light. Ay, he had skill enough ! 

And likewise brooms of millet-grass, and such, 
And baskets of split-cane. And still his touch 
Was sure and swift ; and all his wares were strong, 
And found a ready sale the farms among. 
But now, from fallow field and moorland vast, 
The labourers were trooping home at last. 

Then hasted sweet Mireio to prepare, 
With her own hands and in the open air, 



LOTUS FARM. 25 

Their evening meal. There was a broad flat stone 
Served for a table, and she set thereon 
One mighty dish, where each man plunged his ladle. 
Our weavers wrought meanwhile upon their cradle. 

Until Ramoun, the master of the farm, 

Cried, " How is this ? " brusque was his tone and warm. 

" Come to your supper, Ambroi : no declining ! 

Put up the crib, my man : the stars are shining. 

And thou, Mireio, run and fetch a bowl : 

The travellers must be weary, on my soul ! " 

Wherefore the basket-weaver, well-content, 
Rose with his son and to the table went, 
And sat him down and cut the bread for both ; 
While bright Mireio hasted, nothing loth, 
Seasoned a dish of beans with olive oil, 
And came and sat before them with a smile. 

Not quite fifteen was this same fair Mireio. 
Ah, me ! the purple coast of Font Vieio, 
The hills of Baux, the desolate Crau plain, 
A shape like hers will hardly see again. 
Child of the merry sun, her dimpled face 
Bloomed into laughter with ingenious grace. 

Eyes had she limpid as the drops of dew ; 
And, when she fixed their tender gaze on you, 
Sorrow was not. Stars in a summer night 
Are not more softly, innocently bright : 
And beauteous hair, all waves and rings of jet ; 
And breasts, a double peach, scarce ripened yet. 

Shy, yet a joyous little sprite she was ; 
And, finding all her sweetness in a glass, 
You would have drained it at a single breath. 
'But to our tale, which somewhat lingereth. 
When every man his day's toil had rehearsed 
(So, at my father's farm, I heard them first), 
B 



26 MlREIO. 

" Now, Ambroi, for a song ! " they all began : 

" Let us not sleep above our supper, man ! " 

But he, " Peace ! peace 1 My friends, do ye not know 

On every jester, God, they say, doth blow 

And sets him spinning like a top along ? 

Sing yourselves, lads, you who are young and strong." 

" No jest, good father, none ! " they answered him. 
" But, since the wine o'erflows your goblet's brim, 
Drink with us, Ambroi, and then to your song 1 " 
" Ay, ay, when I was young but that was long 
Ago I'd sing to any man's desire ; 
But now my voice is but a broken lyre." 

" But, Master Ambroi," urged Mireio, 

" Sing one song, please, because 'twill cheer us so." 

" My pretty one," the weaver said again, 

" Only the husks of my old voice remain ; 

But if these please you, I cannot say nay," 

And drained his goblet, and began straightway : 

I. 

Our Captain was Bailly Suffren ; 

We had sailed from Toulon, 
Five hundred sea-faring Prover^aux, 

Stout-hearted and strong : 

'Twas the sweet hope of meeting the English that made 

our hearts burn, 
And till we had thrashed them we vowed we would never 

return. 

II. 

But all the first month of our cruise 

We saw never a thing 
From the shrouds, save hundreds and hundreds 

Of gulls on the wing ; 

And in the next dolorous month, we'd a tempest to fight, 
And had to be bailing out water by day and by night. 



LOTUS FARM. 27 

III. 

By the third, we were driven to madness 

At meeting no foe 
For our thundering cannon to sweep 

From the ocean. When lo ! 
" Hands aloft ! " Captain cried. At the maintop one 

heard the command, 

And the long Arab coast on the lee-bow intently he 
scanned. 

IV. 
Till, "God's thunder ! " he cried. " Three big ve sels 

Bear down on us strong ; 
Run the guns to the ports ! Blaze away ! " 

Shouted Bailly Sum-en. 
" Sharp's the word, gallant lads ! Our figs of Antibes 

they shall test, 

And see how they like those," Captain said, " ere we 
offer the rest ! " 

V. 
A crash fit to deafen ! Before 

The words left his lips 
We had sent forty balls through the hulls 

Of the Englishers' ships ! 
One was done for already. And now the guns only 

heard we, 
The cracking of wood and perpetual groan of the sea. 

VI. 
And now we were closing. Oh, rapture 1 

We lay alongside, 
Our gallant commander stood cool 

On the deck, and he cried, 
" Well done, my brave boys ! But enough ! Cease your 

firing, I say, 

For the time has come now to anoint them with oil of 
Aix.' 



28 MIREIO. 

VII. 

Then we sprang to our dirks and our hatchets, 

As they had been toys ; 
And, grapnel in hand, the Provencal 

Cried, " Board 'em, my boys ! " 
A shout and a leap, and we stood on the Englishers' 

deck; 

And then, ah, 'twas then we were ready our vengeance 
to wreak 1 

VIII. 
Then, oh, the great slaughter ! The crash 

Of the mainmast ensuing ! 
And the blows and the turmoil of men 

Fighting on 'mid the ruin 1 
More than one wild Provencal I saw seize a foe in his 

place, 

And hug till he strained his own life out in deadly 
embrace. 

And then old Ambroi paused. " Ah, yes ! " said he, 
" You do not quite believe my tale, I see. 
Nathless these things all happened, understand : 
Did I not hold the tiller with this hand ? 
Were I to live a thousand years, I say, 
I should remember what befell that day." 

"What, father, you were there and saw the fun ?" 
The labourers cried in mischief. "Three to one, 
They flattened you like scythes beneath the hammer ! " 
" Who, me ? The English ? " the old tar 'gan stammer, 
Upspringing ; then, with smile of fine disdain, 
Took up the burden of his tale again : 

IX. 

So with blood-dabbled feet fought we on 

Four hours, until dark. 
Then, our eyes being cleared of the powder, 

We missed from our bark 



LOTUS FARM. 29 

Fivescore men. But the king of the English lost ships 

of renown : 

Three good vessels with all hands on board to the bottom 
went clown. 

X. 
And now, our sides riddled with shot, 

Once more homeward hie we, 
Yards splintered, mast shivered, sails tattered ; 

But brave Captain Bailly 
Spake us words of good cheer. " My comrades, ye have 

done well ! 
To the great king of Paris the tale of your valour I'll tell ! " 

XI. 

" Well said, Captain dear ! " we replied : 

" Sure the king will hear you 
When you speak. But for us, his poor mariners, 

What will he do, 
Who left our all gladly, our homes and our firesides," we 

said, 

4 ' For his sake, and lo ! now in those homes there i* 
crying for bread ? 

XII. 

" Ah, Admiral, never forget 
When all bow before you, 
With a love like the love of your seamen 

None will adore you ! 
Why, say but the word, and, ere homeward our footsteps. 

we turn, 
Aloft on the tips of our fingers a king you are borne ! " 

XIII. 

A Martigau, mending his nets 

One eve, made this ditty. 
Our admiral bade us farewell, 

And sought the great city. 



30 Mmfeio. 

Were they wroth with his glory up there at the court ? 

Who can say ? 
But we saw our beloved commander no more from that 

day ! 

A timely ending thus the minstrel made, 
Else the fast-coming tears his tale had stayed ; 
But for the labourers they sat intent, 
Mute all, with parted lips, and forward bent 
As if enchanted. Even when he was done, 
For a brief space they seemed to hearken on. 

"And such were aye the songs," said the old man, 
" Sung in the good old days when Martha span. 
Long-winded, maybe, and the tunes were queer. 
But, youngsters, what of that ? They suit my ear. 
Your new French airs mayhap may finer be ; 
But no one understands the words, you see ! " 

Whereon the men, somewhat as in a dream, 
From table rose, and to the running stream 
They led their patient mules, six yoke in all. 
The long vine-branches from a trellised wall 
Waved o'er them waiting, and, from time to time, 
Humming some fragment of the weaver's rhyme. 

Mireio tarried, but not quite alone. 

A social spirit had the little one, 

And she and Vincen chatted happily. 

Twas a fair sight, the two young heads to see 

Meeting and parting, coming still and going 

Like aster-flowers when merry winds are blowing. 

" Now tell me, Vincen," thus Mireio, 
" If oftentimes as you and Ambrio go 
Bearing your burdens the wild country over, 
Some haunted castle you do not discover, 
Or joyous fete, or shining palace meet, 
While the home-nest is evermore our seat." 



LOTUS FARM. 31 

" 'Tis even so, my lady, as you think. 
Why, currants quench the thirst as well as drink ! 
What though we brave all weathers in our toil ? 
Sure, we have joys that rain-drops cannot spoil 
The sun of noon beats fiercely on the head, 
But there are wayside trees unnumbered. 

*' And whenso'er return the summer hours, 
And olive-trees are all bedecked with flowers, 
We hunt the whitening orchards curiously, 
Still following the scent, till we descry 
In the hot noontide, by its emerald flash, 
The tiny cantharis upon the ash. 

" The shops will buy the same. Or off we tramp 
And gather red-oak apples in the swamp, 
Or beat the pond for leeches. Ah, that's grand ! 
You need nor bait nor hook, but only stand 
And strike the water, and then one by one 
They come and seize your legs, and all is done. 

*' And thou wert never at Li Santo even 1 

Dear heart ! The singing there must be like heaven. 

Tis there they bring the sick from all about 

For healing ; and the church is small, no doubt : 

But, ah, what cries they lift ! what vows they pay 

To the great saints ! We saw it one fete-day. 

<( It was the year of the great miracle. 

My God, that was a sight ! I mind it well. 

A feeble boy, beautiful as Saint John, 

Lay on the pavement, sadly calling on 

The saints to give sight to his poor blind eyes, 

And promising his pet lamb in sacrifice. 

" ' My little lamb, with budding horns 1 ' he said, 

* Dear saints ! ' How we all wept ! Then from o'erhead 



32 MlREIO. 

The blessed reliquaries came down slowly, 

Above the thronged people bending lowly, 

And crying, ' Come, great saints, mighty and good ! 

Come, save ! ' The church was like a wind-swept wood* 

" Then the godmother held the child aloft, 
Who spread abroad his fingers pale and soft, 
And passionately grasped the reliquaries 
That held the bones of the three blessed Maries ; 
Just as a drowning man, who cannot swim, 
Will clutch a plank the sea upheaves to him. 

" And then, oh ! then, I saw it with these eyes, 
By faith illumined, the blind boy outcries, 
' I see the sacred relics, and I see 
Grandmother all in tears I Now haste,' said he, 
' My lambkin with the budding horns to bring 
To the dear saints for a thank-offering 1 ' 

" But thou, my lady, God keep thee, I pray, 
Handsome and happy as thou art to-day ! 
Yet if a lizard, wolf, or horrid snake 
Ever should wound thee with its fang, betake 
Thyself forthwith t& the most holy saints, 
Who cure all ills and hearken all complaints." 

So the hours of the summer evening passed. 
Hard-by the big-wheeled cart its shadow cast 
On the white yard. Afar arose and fell 
The frequent tinkle of a little bell 
In the dark marsh : a nightingale sang yonder ; 
An owl made dreamy, sorrowful rejoinder. 

"Now, since the night is moonlit, so the mere 
And trees are glorified, wilt thou not hear," 
The boy besought, " the story of a race 
In which I hoped to win the prize ? " ' ' Ah, yes ! '* 
.The little maiden sighed ; and, more than glad, 
Still gazed with parted lips upon the lad. 



LOTUS FARM. 33 

" Well, then, Mireio, once at Nismes," he said, 
" They had foot-races on the esplanade ; 
And on a certain day a crowd was there 
Collected, thicker than a shock of hair. 
Some shoeless, coatless, hatless, were to run : 
The others only came to see the fun. 

" When all at once upon the scene appears 
One Lagalanto, prince of foot-racers. 
In all Provence, and even in Italy, 
The fleetest-footed far behind left he. 
Yes : Lagalanto, the great Marseillais, 
Thou wilt have heard his name before to-day. 

" A leg, a thigh, he had would not look small 
By John of Cossa's, the great seneschal ; 
And in his dresser many a pewter plate, 
With all his victories carved thereon in state ; 
And you'd have said, to see his scarfs, my lady, 
A wainscot all festooned with rainbows had he. 

" The other runners, of whate'er condition, 
Threw on their clothes at this dread apparition": 
The game was up when Lagalanto came. 
Only one stout-limbed lad, Lou Cri by name, 
Who into Nismes had driven cows that day, 
Durst challenge the victorious Marseillais. 

" Whereon, ' Oh, bah ! ' cried foolish little I 
(Just think ! I only chanced to stand thereby), 
' I can run too ! ' Forthwith they all surround me : 
' Run, then ! ' Alas ! my foolish words confound me ; 
For I had run with partridges alone, 
And only the old oaks for lookers-on. 

" But now was no escape. ' My poor boy, hasten,' 
Says Lagalanto, ' and your latchets fasten.' 
B* 



34 MIREIO. 

Well, so I did. And the great man meanwhile 
Drew o'er his mighty muscles, with a smile, 
A pair of silken hose, whereto were sewn 
Ten tiny golden bells of sweetest tone. 

" So 'twas we three. Each set between his teeth 

A bit of willow, thus to save his breath ; 

Shook hands all round ; then, one foot on the line, 

Trembling and eager we await the sign 

For starting. It is given. Off we fly ; 

"We scour the plain like mad, 'tis you ! 'tis 1 1 

" Wrapped in a cloud of dust, with smoking hair, 
We strain each nerve. Ah, what a race was there ! 
They thought we should have won the goal abreast, 
Till I, presumptuous, sprang before the rest : 
And that was my undoing ; for I dropped 
Pale, dying as it seemed. But never stopped 

"The others. On, on, on, with steady gait, 
Just like the pasteboard horses at Aix fete. 
The famous Marseillais thought he must win 
(They used to say of him he had no spleen) ; 
But, ah ! my lady, on that day of days, 
He found his man, Lou Cri of Mouries. 

" For now they pass beyond the gazing line, 
And almost touch the goal. O beauty mine ! 
Couldst thou have seen Lou Cri leap forward then ! 
Never, I think, in mountain, park, or glen, 
A stag, a hare, so fleet of foot you'd find. 
Howled like a wolf the other, just behind. 

" Lou Cri is victor ! hugs the post for joy. 
Then all of Nismes comes flocking round the boy, 
To learn the birthplace of this wondrous one. 
The pewter plate is flashing in the sun, 
The hautboys flourish, cymbals clang apace, 
As he receives the guerdon of the race." 



LOTUS FARM. 35 

"And Lagalanto?" asks Mireio. 
" Why, he upon the ground was sitting low, 
Powdered with dust, the shifting folk among, 
Clasping his knees. With shame his soul was wrung 
And, with the drops that from his forehead fell, 
Came tears of bitterness unspeakable. 

"Lou Cri approached, and made a modest bow. 
' Brother, let's to the ale-house arbour now, 
Behind the amphitheatre. Why borrow, 
Upon this festive day, tears for the morrow ? 
The money left we'll drink together thus : 
There's sunshine yet enough for both of us.' 

" Then trembling rose the runner of Marseilles, 
And from his limbs made haste to tear away 
The silken hose, the golden bells. ' Here, lad 
Raising his pallid face, ' take them ! ' he said. 
' I am grown old ; youth decks thee like a swan j 
So put the strong man's gear with honour on. 

" He turned, stricken like an ash the storm bereaves 

In summer-time of all its tower of leaves. 

The king of runners vanished from the place ; 

And never more ran he in any race, 

Nor even leaped on the inflated hide, 

In games at Saint John's or St. Peter's tide." 

So Vincen told the story, waxing warm, 
Of all he'd seen, before the Lotus Farm. 
His cheeks grew red, his eyes were full of light ; 
He waved his hand to point his speech aright, 
Abundant was the same as showers in May 
That fall upon a field of new-mown hay. 

The crickets, chirruping amid the dew, 
Paused more than once to listen. Often, too, 



36 MiRfcio. 

The bird of evening, the sweet nightingale, 
Kept silence ; thrilling so at Vincen's tale, 
As aye she harked her leafy perch upon, 
She might have kept awake until the dawn. 

" Oh, mother ! " cried Mireio, "surely never 
Was weaver-lad so marvellously clever ! 
I love to sleep, dear, on a winter night ; 
But now I cannot, it is all too light. 
Ah, just one story more before we go, 
For I could pass a lifetime listening so ! '* 



CANTO II. 
The Leaf-picking. 

SING, magnarello, merrily, 
As the green leaves you gather f 
In their third sleep the silk-worms lie, 

And lovely is the weather 
Like brown bees that in open glades 

From rosemary gather honey, 
The mulberry-trees swarm full of maids,, 
Glad as the air is sunny ! 

It chanced one morn it was May's loveliest 

Mireio gathered leaves among the rest. 

It chanced, moreover, on that same May morning,. 

The little gypsy, for her own adorning, 

Had cherries in her ears, for rings, suspended, 

Just as our Vincen's footsteps thither tended. 

Like Latin seaside people everywhere, 
He wore a red cap on his raven hair, 
With a cock's feather gayly set therein ; 
And, prancing onward, with a stick made spin 
The flints from wayside stone-heaps, and set flying 
The lazy adders in his pathway lying. 

When suddenly, from the straight, leafy alley, 
" Whither so fast ? " a voice comes musically. 
Mireio's. Vincen darts beneath the trees, 
Looks up, and soon the merry maiden sees. 



38 MlREIO. 

Perched on a mulberry-tree, she eyed the la 
Like some gray-crested lark, and he was glad. 

41 How then, Mireio, comes the picking on ? 
Little by little, all will soon be done ! 
May I not help thee?" " That were very meet," 
She said, and laughed upon her airy seat. 
Sprang Vincen like a squirrel from the clover, 
Ran nimbly up the tree, and said, moreover 

'"Now since old Master Ramoun hath but thee, 

Come down, I pray, and strip the lower tree ! 

I'll to the top ! " As busily the maiden 

Wrought on, she murmured, " How the soul doth 

gladden 

To have good company ! There's little joy 
In lonely work ! " " Ay is there ! " said the boy : 

" For when in our old hut we sit alone, 

Father and I, and only hear the Rhone 

Rush headlong o'er the shingle, 'tis most drear ! 

Not in the pleasant season of the year, 

For then upon our travels we are bound, 

And trudge from farm to farm the country round. 

" But when the holly-berries have turned red, 
And winter comes, and nights are long," he said, 
"And sitting by the dying fire we catch 
Whistle or mew of goblin at the latch ; 
And I must wait till bed-time there with him, 
Speaking but seldom, and the room so dim," 

Broke in the happy girl, unthinkingly, 

" Ah ! but your mother, Vincen, where is she ? " 

<( Mother is dead." The two were still awhile : 

Then he, " But Vincen eto could beguile 

The time when she was there. A little thing, 

ut she could keep the hut." " I'm wondering 



THE LEAF-PICKING. 39 

' <( You have a sister, Vincen? " " That have I ! 
A merry lass and good," was the reply : 
" For down at Font-dou-Rei, in Beaucaire, 
Whither she went to glean, she was so fair 
And deft at work that all were smitten by her ; 
And there she stays as servant by desire." 

"" And you are like her ? " "Now that makes me merry. 
Why, she is blonde, and I brown as a berry ! 
But wouldst thou know whom she is like, the elf ? 
Why, even like thee, Mireio, thine own self ! 
Your two bright heads, with all their wealth of hair 
Like myrtle-leaves, would make a perfect pair. 

" But, ah ! thou knowest better far to gather 

The muslin of thy cap than doth the other ! 

My little sister is not plain nor dull, 

But thou, thou art so much more beautiful ! " 

" Oh, what a Vincen ! " cried Mireio, 

And suddenly the half-culled branch let go. 

Sing, magnarello, merrily, 

As the green leaves you gather ! 
In their third sleep the silk-worms lie, 

And lovely is the weather. 
Like brown bees that in open glades 

From rosemary gather honey, 
The mulberry-trees swarm full of maids, 

Glad as the air is sunny ! 

" And so you fancy I am fair to view, 
Fairer than Vinceneto ? " " That I do 1 " 
" But what advantage have I more than she? " 
<( Mother divine ! " he cried, impetuously, 
"That of the goldfinch o'er the fragile wren 
Grace for the eye song for the hearts of men 



40 MIR&IO. 

" What more ? Ah, my poor sister ! Hear me speak, - 

Thou wilt not get the white out of the leek : 

Her eyes are like the water of the sea, 

Blue, clear thine, black, and they flash gloriously. 

And, O Mireio ! when on me they shine, 

I seem to drain a bumper of cooked wine ! 

" My sister hath a silver voice and mellow,- 
I love to hear her sing the Peirounello, 
But, ah ! my sweet young lady, every word 
Thou'st given me my spirit more hath stirred, 
My ear more thrilled, my very heart-strings wrung, 
More than a thousand songs divinely sung ! 

1 ' With roaming all the pastures in the sun, 
My little sister's face and neck are dun 
As dates ; but thou, most fair one, I think well, 
Art fashioned like the flowers of Asphodel. 
So the bold Summer with his tawny hand 
Dare not caress thy forehead white and bland. 

" Moreover, Vinceneto is more slim 

Than dragon-flies that o'er the brooklet skim. 

Poor child ! In one year grew she up to this ; 

But verily in thy shape is naught amiss." 

Again Mireio, turning losy red, 

Let fall her branch, and " What a Vincen ! " said. 

Sing, magnarello, merrily, 

The green leaves ever piling ! 
Two comely children sit on high, 

Amid the foliage, smiling. 
Sing, magnarello, loud and oft : 

Your merry labour hasten. 
The guileless pair who laugh aloft 

Are learning love's first lesson. 



THE LEAF-PICKING. 41 

Cleared from the hills meanwhile the mists of morn, 
And o'er the ruined towers, whither return 
Nightly the grim old lords of Baux, they say ; 
And o'er the barren rocks 'gan take their way 
Vultures, whose large, white wings are seen to gleam 
Resplendent in the noontide's burning beam. 

Then cried the maiden, pouting, "We have done- 
Naught ! Oh, shame to idle so ! Some one 
Said he would help me ; and that some one still 
Doth naught but talk, and make me laugh at wilL 
Work now, lest mother say I am unwary 
And idle, and too awkward yet to marry ! 

" Ah ! my brave friend, I think should one engage you; 
To pick leaves by the quintal, and for wage, you 
Would all the same sit still and feast your eyes, 
Handling the ready sprays in dreamy wise ! " 
Whereat the boy, a trifle disconcerted, 
" And so thou takest me for a gawky ! " blurted. 

"We'll see, my fair young lady," added he, 

" Which of us two the better picker be ! " 

They ply both hands now. With vast animation,. 

They bend and strip the branches. No occasion 

For rest or idle chatter either uses 

(The bleating sheep, they say, her mouthful loses),. 

Until the mulberry-tree is bare of leaves, 

And these the ready sack at once receives, 

At whose distended mouth ah, youth is sweet ! 

Mireio's pretty taper hand will meet 

In strange entanglement that somehow lingers 

That Vincen's, with its brown and burning fingers. 

Both started. In their cheeks the flush rose higher j 
They felt the heat of some mysterious fire. 



42 MiREIO. 

They dropped the mulberry-leaves as if afraid, 
And, tremulous with passion, the boy said, 
" What aileth thee, my lady ? answer me ! 
Did any hidden hornet dare sting thee ? " 

Well-nigh inaudible, with head bent low, 

" I know not, Vincen," thus Mireio. 

And so they turned a few more leaves to gather, 

And for a while spake not again, but rather 

Exchanged bright looks and sidelong, saying well 

The one who first should laugh, would break the spell. 

Their hearts beat high, the green leaves fell like rain ; 

And, when the time for sacking came again, 

Whether by chance or by contrivance, yet 

The white hand and the brown hand always met. 

Nor seemed there any lack of happiness 

The while their labour failed not to progress. 

Sing, magnarello, merrily, 

As the green leaves you gather ! 

The sun of May is riding high, 
And ardent is the weather. 

Now suddenly Mireio whispered, " Hark ! 
What can that be ? " and listened like a lark 
Upon a vine, her small forefinger pressing 
Against her lip, and eager eyes addressing 
To a bird's nest upon a leafy bough, 
Just opposite the one where she was now. 

"Ah ! wait a little while ! " with bated breath, 
So the young basket -weaver answereth, 
And like a sparrow hopped from limb to limb 
Toward the nest. Down in the tree-trunk dim, 
Close peering through a crevice in the wood, 
Full-fledged and lively saw he the young brood. 



THE LEAF-PICKING. 43 

And, sitting firmly the rough bough astride, 
Clung with one hand, and let the other glide 
Into the hollow trunk. Above his head 
Mireio leaned with her cheeks rosy red. 
'*' What sort ?" she whispered from her covert shady. 
"Beauties ! " " But what ? " " Blue tomtits, my young 
lady ! " 

Then laughed the maiden, and her laugh was gay : 

*' See, Vincen ! Have you never heard them say 

That when two find a nest in company, 

On mulberry, or any other tree, 

The Church within a year will join those two ? 

And proverbs, father says, are always true." 

" Yea," quoth the lad ; " but do not thou forget 

That this, our happy hope, may perish yet, 

If all the birdies be not caged forthwith." 

* ( Jesu divine ! " the maiden murmureth : 

" Put them by quickly ! It concerns us much 

Our birdies should be safe from alien touch. " 

V Why, then, the very safest place," said he, 

"" Methinks, Mireio, would thy bodice be !" 

4< Oh, surely ! " So the lad explores the hollow, 

His hand withdrawing full of tomtits callow. 

Four were they ; and the maid in ecstacy 

Cries '' Mon Dieu ! " and lifts her hands on high. 

*' How many ! What a pretty brood it is ! 

There ! There, poor darlings, give me just one kiss ! " 

And, lavishing a thousand fond caresses, 

Tenderly, carefully, the four she presses 

Inside her waist, obeying Vincen's will ; 

While he, " Hold out thy hands ! there are more still 1 '* 

" Oh sweet ! The little eyes in each blue head 
Are sharp as needles," as Mireio said 



44 MIRKIO. 

Softly, three more of the wee brood she pressed 
Into their smooth, white prison with the rest, 
Who, when bestowed within that refuge warm, 
Thought they were in their nest and safe from harm. 

" Are there more, Vincen? " " Ay ! " he answered her. 

" Then, Holy Virgin ! you're a sorcerer ! " 

" Thou simple maid ! About St. George's day, 

Ten, twelve, and fourteen eggs, these tomtits lay. 

Ay, often. Now let these the others follow 1 

They arejhe last : so good-bye, pretty hollow ! " 

But ere the words were spoken, and the maid 

In her flowered neckerchief had fairly laid 

Her little charge, she gave a piercing wail : 

" Oh me ! oh me ! " then murmured, and turned pale %. 

And, laying both her hands upon her breast, 

Moaned, " I am dying ! " and was sore distressed, 

And could but weep : " Ah, they are scratching me ! 
They sting ! Come quickly, Vincent, up the tree ! "" 
For on the last arrival had ensued 
Wondrous commotion in the hidden brood ; 
The fledglings latest taken from the nest 
Had sore disorder wrought among the rest. 

Because within so very small a valley 

All could not lie at ease, so must they gayly 

Scramble with claw and wing down either slope, 

And up the gentle hills, thus to find scope]: 

A thousand tiny somersets they turn, 

A thousand pretty rolls they seem to learn. 

And " Ah, come quick ! " is still the maiden's cry, 
Trembling like vine-spray when the wind is high, 
Or like a heifer slung with cattle-flies. 
And, as she bends and writhes in piteous wise, 
Leaps Vincen upward till he plants his feet 
Once more beside her on her airy seat. 



THE LEAF-PICKING. 45 

Sing, magnarello, heap your leaves, 

While sunny is the weather ! 
He comes to aid her when she grieves : 

The two are now together. 

"'Thou likest not this tickling?" kindly said he. 
" What if thou wert like me, my gentle lady, 
And hadst to wander barefoot through the nettles ? " 
So proffering his red sea-cap, there he settles 
Fast as she draws them from her neckerchief 
The birdies, to Mireio's vast relief. 

Yet ah, poor dear, the downcast eyes of her ! 
She dares not look at her deliverer 
For a brief space. But soon a smile ensues, 
And the tears vanish, as the morning dews 
That drench the flowers and grass at break of day 
Roll into little pearls and pass away. 

And then there came a fresh catastrophe : 
The branch wheieon they sat ensconced in glee 
Snapped, broke asunder, and with ringing shriek 
Mireio flung her arms round Vincen's neck, 
And he clasped hers, and they whirled suddenly 
Down through the leaves upon the supple rye. 

Listen, wind of the Greek, wind of the sea, 
And shake no more the verdant canopy ! 
Hush for one moment, O thou childish breeze ! 
Breathe soft and whisper low, beholding these ! 
Give them a little time to dream of bliss, 
To dream at least, in such a world as this ! 

Thou too, swift streamlet of the prattling voice, 
Peace, prithee ! In this hour, make little noise 
Among the vocal pebbles of thy bed ! 
Ay, little noise ! Because two souls have sped 
To one bright region. Leave them there, to roam 
Over the starry heights, their proper home ! 



46 MiREIO. 

A moment, and she struggled to be free 

From his embrace. The flower of the quince-tree 

Is not so pale. Then backward the two sank, 

And gazed at one another on the bank, 

Until the weaver's son the silence brake, 

And thus in seeming wrath arose and spake : 

"Shame on thee, thou perfidious mulberry ! 

A devil's tree ! A Friday-planted tree ! 

Blight seize and wood-louse eat thee ! May thy master 

Hold thee in horror for this day's disaster ! 

Tell me thou art not hurt, Mireio ! " 

Trembling from head to foot, she answered, " No : 

" I am not hurt ; but as a baby weeps 

And knows not why, there's something here that keeps. 

Perpetual tumult in my heart. A pain 

Blinds me and deafens me, and fills my brain, 

So that my blood in a tumultuous riot 

Courses my body through, and won't be quiet." 

" May it not be," the simple boy replied, 

" Thou fearest to have thy mother come and chide 

Thy tardy picking, as when I come back 

Late from the blackberry-field with face all black, 

And tattered clothes ? " Mireio sighed again, 

" Ah, no ! This is another kind of pain !" 

"Or possibly a sun -stroke may have lighted 
Upon thee ! " And the eager Vincen cited 
An ancient crone among the hills of Baux, 
Taven by name, "who on the forehead, so, 
A glass of water sets : the ray malign 
The dazed brain for the crystal will resign." 

"Nay, nay 1 " impetuously the maiden cried, 
" Floods of May sunshine never terrified 



THE LEAF-PICKING. 

The girls of Crau. Why should I hold you waiting ? 

Vincen, in vain my heart is palpitating ! 

My secret cannot bide a^home so small : 

I love you, Vincen, love you ! That is all ! " 

The river-banks, the close-pruned willows hoary,. 
Green grass and ambient air, hearing this story, 
Were full of glee. But the poor basket-weaver, 
" Princess, that thou who art so fair and clever, 
Shouldst have a tongue given to wicked lying ! 
Why, it confounds me ! It is stupefying ! 

" What ! thou in love with me ? Mireio, 
My poor life is yet happy. Do not go 
And make a jest thereof ! I might believe 
Just for one moment, and thereafter grieve 
My soul to death. Ah, no ! my pretty maid, 
Laugh no more at me in this wise ! " he said. 

" Now may God shut me out of Paradise, 

Vincen, if I have ever told you lies ! 

Go to I I love you ! Will that kill you, friend ? 

But if you -will be cruel, and so send 

Me from your side, 'tis I who will fall ill, 

And at your feet lie low till sorrow kill ! " 

' ' No more ! no more ! " cried Vincen, desperately t 
" There is a gulf 'twixt thee and me ! The stately 
Queen of the Lotus Farm art thou, and all 
Bow at thy coming, hasten to thy call, 
While I, a vagrant weaver, only wander, 
Plying my trade from Valabrego yonder." 

" What care I ? " cried the fiery girl at once. 

Sharp as a sheaf-binder's came her response. 

" May not my lover, then, a baron be, 

Or eke a weaver, if he pleases me ? 

But if you will not have me pine away, 

Why look so handsome, even in rags, I say?" 



48 MIREIO. 

He turned and faced her. Ah, she was enchanting ! 

And as a charmed bird falls dizzy, panting, 

So he. " Mireio, thou'rt a sorceress ! 

And I bedazzled by thy loveliness. 

Thy voice, too, mounts into this head of mine, 

And makes me like a man o'ercome with wine. 

" Why, can it be, Mireio? Seest thou not 

Even now with thy embrace my brain is hot. 

I am a pack-bearer, and well may be 

A laughing-stock for evermore to thee, 

But thou shall have the truth, dear, in this hour : 

I love thee, with a love that could devour ! 

41 Wert thou to ask, lo, love I thee so much ! 
The golden goat, that ne'er felt mortal touch 
Upon its udders, but doth only lick 
Moss from the base of the precipitous peak 
Of Baux, I'd perish in the quarries there, 
Or bring thee down the goat with golden hair ! 

" So much, that, if thou saidst, ' I want a star,' 
There is no stream so wild, no sea so far, 
But I would cross ; no headsman, steel or fire, 
That could withhold me. Yea, I would climb higher 
Than peaks that kiss the sky, that star to wrest ; 
And Sunday thou shouldst wear it on thy breast ! 

" O my Mireio ! Ever as I gaze, 

Thy beauty fills me with a deep amaze. 

Once, when by Vaucluse grotto I was going, 

I saw a fig-tree in the bare rock growing ; 

So very spare it was, the lizards gray 

Had found more shade beneath a jasmine spray. 

" But, round about the roots, once every year 
The neighbouring stream comes gushing, as I hear, 



THE LEAF-PICKING. 49 

And the shrub drinks the water as it rises, 
And that one drink for the whole year suffices. 
Even as the gem is cut to fit the ring, 
This parable to us is answering. 

" I am the fig-tree on the barren mountain ; 
And thou, mine own, art the reviving fountain ! 
Surely it would suffice me, could I feel 
That, once a year, I might before thee kneel, 
And sun myself in thy sweet face, and lay 
My lips unto thy fingers, as to-day ! " 

Trembling with love, Mireio hears him out, 
And lets him wind his arms her neck about 
And clasp her as bewildered. Suddenly, 
Through the green walk, quavers an old wife's cry : 
" How now, Mireio ? Are you coming soon ? 
What will the silk- worms have to eat at noon ? " 

As ofttimes, at the coming on of night, 

A flock of sparrows on a pine alight 

And fill the air with joyous chirruping, 

Yet, if a passing gleaner pause and fling 

A stone that way, they to the neighbouring wood, 

By terror winged, their instant flight make good ; 

So, with a tumult of emotion thrilled, 
Fled the enamoured two across the field. 
But when, her leaves upon her head, the maid 
Turned silently toward the farm, he stayed, 
Vincen, and breathless watched her in her flight 
Over the fallow, till she passed from sight. 



CANTO III. 

The Cocooning. 

WHEN the crop is fair in the olive-yard, 
And the earthen jars are ready 
For the golden oil from the barrels poured, 

And the big cart rocks unsteady 
With its tower of gathered sheaves, and strains 
And groans on its way through fields and lanes ; 

When brawny and bare as an old athlete 
Comes Bacchus the dance a-leading, 

And the labourers all, with juice-dyed feet, 
The vintage of Crau are treading, 

And the good wine pours from the brimful presses, 

And the ruddy foam in the vats increases ; 

When under the leaves of the Spanish broom 

The clear silk-worms are holden, 
An artist each, in a tiny loom, 

Weaving a web all golden, 
Fine, frail cells out of sunlight spun, 
Where they creep and sleep by the million, 

Glad is Provence on a day like that, 

'Tis the time of jest and laughter : 
The Ferigoulet and the Baume Muscat 

They quaff, and they sing thereafter. 
And lads and lasses, their toils between, 
Dance to the tinkling tambourine. 



THE COCOON ING. 51 

" Methinks, good neighbours, I am Fortune's pet. 
Ne'er in my trellised arbor saw I yet 
A silkier bower, cocoons more worthy praise, 
Or richer harvest, since the year of grace 
When first I laid my hand on Ramoun's arm 
And came, a youthful bride, to Lotus Farm." 

So spake Jano Mario, Ramoun's wife, 

The fond, proud mother who had given life 

To our Mireio. Unto her had hied, 

The while were gathered the cocoons outside, 

Her neighbours. In the silk- worm-room they throng ; 

And, as they aid the picking, gossip long. 

To these Mireio tendered now and then 
Oak-sprigs and sprays of rosemary ; for when 
The worms, lured by the mountain odour, come 
In myriads, there to make their silken home, 
The sprays and sprigs, adorned in such wise, 
Are like the golden palms of Paradise. 

" On Mother Mary's altar yesterday," 
Jano Mario said, " I went to lay 
My finer sprays, by way of tithe. And so 
I do each year ; for you, my women, know 
That, when the holy Mother will, 'tis she 
Who sendeth up the worms abundantly." 

" Now, for my part," said Zeu of Host Farm, 

' ' Great fears have I my worms will come to harm. 

You mind that ugly day the east wind blew, 

I left my window open, if you knew 

Ever such folly ! and to my affright 

Upon my floor are twenty, now turned white." 

To Zeu thus the crone Taven replied 

A witch, who from the cliffs of Baux had hied 



52 Mmfcio. 

To help at the cocooning : " Youth is bold, 
The young think they know better than the old j 
And age is torment, and we mourn the fate 
Which bids us see and know, but all too late, 

" Ye are such giddy women, every one, 
That, if the hatching promise well, ye run 
Straightway about the streets the tale to tell. 
' Come see my silk-worms ! 'Tis incredible 
How fine they are ! " Envy can well dissemble : 
She hastens to your room, her heart a-tremble 

"With wrath. And 'Well done, neighbour ! ' she says 

cheerly : 
1 This does one good ! You've still your caul on, 

clearly ! ' 

But when your head is turned, she casts upon 'em 
The envious one a look so full of venom, 
It knots and burns 'em up. And then you say 
It was the east wind plastered 'em that way 1 " 

" I don't say that has naught to do with it," 

Quoth Zeu. " Still it had been quite as fit 

For me to close the window." " Doubt you, then, 

The harm the eye can do," went on Taven, 

" When in the head it glistens balefully?" 

And Zeu scanned, herself with piercing eye. 

"Ye are such fools, ye seem to think," she said, 
" That scraping with a scalpel on the dead 
Would win its honey-secret from the bee ! 
But may not a fierce look, now answer me, 
The unborn babe for evermore deform, 
And dry the cow's milk in her udders warm ? 

" An owl may fascinate a little bird ; 
A serpent, flying geese, as I have heard, 



THE COCOONING. 53 

How high soe'er they mount. And if one keep 
A fixed gaze upon silk-worms, will they sleep ? 
Moreover, is there, neighbours, in the land 
So wise a virgin that she can withstand 

' ' The fiery eyes of passionate youth ? " Here stopped 

The hag, and damsels four their cocoons dropped ; 

"In June as in October," murmuring, 

" Her tongue hath evermore a barbed sting, 

The ancient viper ! What 1 the lads, say you ? 

Let them come, then ! We'll see what they can do ? " 

But other merry ones retorted, " No ! 

We want them not ! Do we, Mireio ? " 

" Not we ! Nor is it always cocooning, 

So I'll a bottle from the cellar bring 

That you will find delicious." And she fled 

Toward the house because her cheeks grew red. 

" Now, friends," said haughty Lauro, with decision, 

"This is my mind, though poor be my condition : 

I'll smile on no one, even though my lover 

As king of fairy-land his realm should offer. 

A pleasure were it, could I see him lying, 

And seven long years before my footstool sighing." 

"Ah ! " said Clemen9o, "should a king me woo, 
And say he loved me, without much ado 
I'd grant the royal suit ! And chiefly thus 
Were he a young king and a glorious. 
A king of men, in beauty, I'd let come 
And freely lead me to his palace home ! 

" But see ! If I were once enthroned there, 
A sovereign and an empress, in a fair 
Mantle bedecked, of golden-flowered brocade, 
With pearls and emeralds dazzling round my head, 
Then would my heart for my poor country yearn ; 
And I, the queen, would unto Baux return. 



54 MIREIO. 

" And I would make my capital at Baux, 

And on the rock where lie its ruins low 

I would rebuild our ancient castle, and 

A white tower on the top thereof should stand 

Whose head should touch the stars. Thither retiring, 

If rest or solace were the queen desiring, 

" We'd climb the turret-stair, my prince and I, 
And gladly throw the crown and mantle by. 
And would it not be blissful with my love, 
Aloft, alone to sit, the world above ? 
Or, leaned upon the parapet by his side, 
To search the lovely landscape far and wide, 

" Our own glad kingdom of Provence descrying, 
Like some great orange-grove beneath us lying 
All fair ? And, ever stretching dreamily 
Beyond the hills and plains, the sapphire sea ; 
While noble ships, tricked out with streamers gay, 
Just graze the Chateau d'lf, and pass away ? 

" Or we would turn to lightning-scathed Ventour, 

Who, while the lesser heights before him cower, 

His hoary head against the heaven raises, 

As I have seen, in solitary places 

Of beech and pine, with staff in aged hand, 

Some shepherd-chief, his flock o'erlooking, stand. 

" Again, we'd follow the great Rhone awhile, 

Aclown whose banks the cities brave defile, 

And dip their lips and drink, with dance and song. 

Stately is the Rhone's march, and very strong ; 

But even he must bend at Avignon 

His haughty head to Notre Dame des Doms. 

"Or watch the ever-varying Durance, 

Now like some fierce and ravenous goat advance 



THE COCOONING. 55 

Devouring banks and bridges ; now demure 
As maid from rustic well who bears her ewer, 
Spilling her scanty water as she dallies, 
And every youth along her pathway rallies.' 

So spake her sweet Proverifal majesty, 

And rose with brimful apron, and put by 

Her gathered treasure. Two more maids were there, 

Twin sisters, the one dark, the other fair, 

Azalais, Vioulano. The stronghold 

Of Estoublon sheltered their parents old. 

And oft these two to Lotus Farmstead came ; 
While that mischievous lad, Cupid by name, 
Who loves to sport with generous hearts and tender, 
Had made the sisters both their love surrender 
To the same youth. So Azalais said, 
The dark one, lifting up her raven head : 

" Now, damsels, play awhile that I were queen. 
The Marseilles ships, the Beaucaire meadows greeru 
Smiling La Ciotat, and fair Salon, 
With all her almond trees, to me belong. 
Then the young maids I'd summon by decree, 
From Aries, Baux, Barbentano, unto me. 

" ' Come, fly like birds 1 ' the order should be given ; 
And I, of these, would choose the fairest seven, 
And royal charge upon the same would lay, 
The false love and the true in scales to weigh. 
And then would merry counsel holden be ; 
For sure it is a great calamity 

"That half of those who love, with love most meet, 

Can never marry, and their joy complete. 

But when I, Azalais, hold the helm, 

I proclamation make, that in my realm 

True lovers wounded in their cruel sport 

Shall aye find mercy at the maiden's court. 



56 MIREIO. 

" And if one sell her robe of honour white, 

Whether it be for gold or jewel bright, 

And if one offer insult, or betray 

A fond heart, unto such as these alway 

The high court of the seven maids shall prove 

The stern avenger of offended love. 

" And if two lovers the same maid desire, 
Or if two maids to the same lad aspire, 
My council's duty it shall be to choose 
Which loves the better, which the better sues, 
And which is worthier of a happy fate. 
Moreover, on my maidens there shall wait 

"Seven sweet poets, who from time to time 
Shall write the laws of love in lovely rhyme 
Upon wild vine- leaves or the bark of trees ; 
And sometimes, in a stately chorus, these 
Will sing the same, and then their couplets all 
Like honey from the honey-comb will fall." 

So, long ago, the whispering pines among, 
Faneto de Gauteume may have sung, 
When she the glory of her star-crowned head 
On Roumanin and on the Alpines shed ; 
Or Countess Dio, of the passionate lays, 
Who held her courts of love in the old days. 

But now Mireio, to the room returning, 
With face as radiant as an Easter morning, 
A flagon bore ; and, for their spirits' sake, 
Besought them all her beverage to partake : 
" For this will make us work with heartier will ; 
So come, good women, and your goblets fill ! " 

Then, pouring from the wicker-covered flask 
A generous drink for whosoe'er might ask, 



THE COCOONING. 57 

(A string of gold the falling liquor made), 
" I mixed this cordial mine own self," she said : 
" One leaves it in a window forty days, 
That it may mellow in the sun's hot rays. 

" Herein are mountain herbs, in number three. 
The liquor keeps their odour perfectly : 
It strengthens one." Here brake in other voices : 
" Listen, Mireio ! Tell us what your choice is ; 
For these have told what they would do, if they 
Were queens, or came to great estate one day. 

" In such a case, Mireio, what would you ? " 
" Who, I ? How can I tell what I would do ? 
I am so happy in our own La Crau 
With my dear parents, wherefore should I go ? " 
" Ah, ha ! " outspake another maiden bold : 
" Little care you for silver or for gold. 

" But on a certain morn, I mind it well, 
Forgive me, dear, that I the tale should tell ! 
'Twas Tuesday : I had gathered sticks that day, 
And, fagot on my hip, had won my way 
Almost to La Crous-Blanco, when I 'spied 
You in a tree, with some one by your side 

" Who chatted gayly. A lithe form he had " 

" Whence did he come ? " they cried. " Who was the 

lad ? " 

Said Noro, " To tell that were not so easy, 
Because among the thick-leaved mulberry-trees he 
Was hidden half ; yet think I 'twas the clever 
Vincen, the Valabregan basket -weaver 1 " 

" Oh ! " cried the damsels all, with peals of laughter, 

" See you not what the little cheat was after ? 

A pretty basket she would fain receive, 

And made this poor boy in her love believe ! 

The fairest maiden the whole country over 

Has chosen the barefoot Vincen for her lover ! " 



58 MlREIO. 

So mocked they, till o'er each young countenance 
In turn there fell a dark and sidelong glance, 
Taven's, who cried, " A thousand curses fall 
Upon you, and the vampire seize you all ! 
If the good Lord from heaven this way came, 
You girls, I think, would giggle all the same. 

" 'Tis brave to laugh at this poor lad of osiers ; 
But mark 1 the future may make strange disclosures, 
Poor though he be. Now hear the oracle ! 
God in his house once wrought a miracle ; 
And I can show the truth of what I say, 
For, lasses, it all happened in my day. 

" Once, in the wild woods of the Luberon, 
A shepherd kept his flock. His days were long ; 
But when at last the same were well-nigh spent, 
And toward the grave his iron frame was bent, 
He sought the hermit of Saint Ouqueri, 
To make his last confession piously. 

"Alone, in the Vaumasco valley lost, 
His foot had never sacred threshold crost, 
Since he partook his first communion. 
Even his prayers were from his memory gone ; 
But now he rose and left his cottage lowly, 
And came and bowed before the hermit holy. 

" 'With what sin chargest thou thyself, my brother? 

The solitary said. Replied the other, 

The aged man, ' Once, long ago, I slew 

A little bird about my flock that flew, 

A cruel stone I flung its life to end : 

It was a wagtail, and the shepherds' friend. 

"'Is this a simple soul,' the hermit thought, 
' Or is it an impostor ? ' And he sought 



THE COCOONING. 59 

Right curiously to read the old man's face 
Until, to solve the riddle, ' Go,' he says, 
' And hang thy shepherd's cloak yon beam upon, 
And afterward I will absolve my son.' 

" A single sunbeam through the chapel strayed ; 
And there it was the priest the suppliant bade 
To hang his cloak ! But the good soul arose, 
And drew it off with mien of all repose, 
And threw it upward. And it hung in sight 
Suspended on the slender shaft of light ! 

" Then fell the hermit prostrate on the floor, 
' Oh, man of God ! ' he cried, and he wept sore, 
* Let but the blessed hand these tears bedew, 
Fulfil the sacred office for us two ! 
No sins of thine can I absolve, 'tis clear : 
Thou art the saint, and I the sinner here ! ' ' 

Her story ended, the crone said no more ; 

But all the laughter of the maids was o'er. 

Only Laureto dared one little joke : 

1 ' This tells us ne'er to laugh at any cloak ! 

Good may the beast be, although rough the hide ; 

But, girls, methought young mistress I espied 

" Grow crimson as an autumn grape, because 
Vincen's dear name so lightly uttered was. 
There's mystery here ! Mireio, we are jealous ! 
Lasted the picking long that day ? Pray, tell us ! 
"When two friends meet, the hour is winged with pleasure ; 
And, for a lover, one has always leisure ! " 

" Oh, fie ! " Mireio said. " Enough of joking ! 
Mind your work now, and be not so provoking ! 
You would make swear the very saints ! But I 
Promise you one and all, most faithfully, 
I'll seek a convent while my years are tender, 
Sooner than e'er my maiden heart surrender ! ' 



60 MIREIO. 

Then brake the damsels into merry chorus : 
" Have we not pretty Magali before us ? 
Who love and lovers held in such disdain 
That, to escape their torment, she was fain 
To Saint Blasi's in Aries away to hie, 
And bury her sweet self from every eye." 



" Come, Noro, you, whose voice is ever thrilling, 
Who charm us all, sing now, if you are willing, 
The song of Magali, the cunning fairy, 
Who love had shunned by all devices airy. 
A bird, a vine, a sunbeam she became, 
Yet fell herself, love's victim all the same ! 



" Queen of my soul ! " sang Noro, and the rest 
Fell straightway to their work with twofold zest ; 
And as, when one cicala doth begin 
Its high midsummer note, the rest fall in 
And swell the chorus, so the damsels here 
Sang the refrain with voices loud and clear : 



I. 

" Magali, queen of my soul, 

The dawn is near ! 
Hark to my tambourine, 
Hide not thy bower within, 

Open and hear ! 

II. 

" The sky is full of stars, 

And the wind soft ; 
But, when thine eyes they see, 
The stars, O Magali, 

Will pale aloft I " 



THE COCOONING. 6t 

III. 

"Idle as summer breeze 

The tune thou playest ! 
I'll vanish in the sea, 
A silver eel will be, 

Ere thou me stayest. " 

IV. 

" If thou become an eel, 

And so forsake me, a , 

I will turn fisher jfoy, v I 

And fish the water blue 

Until I take thee ! " 

V. 

" In vain with net or line 

Thou me implorest : 
I'll be a bird that day, 
And wing my trackless way 

Into the forest ! " 

VI. 

" If thou become a bird, 

And so dost dare me, 
I will a fowler be, 
And follow cunningly 

Until I snare thee ! " 



VII. 

"When thou thy cruel snare 

Settest full surely, 
I will a flower become, 
And in my prairie home 

Hide me securely ! " 



62 Mmfeio. 

VIII. 

" If thou become a flower, 

Before thou thickest 
I'll be a streamlet clear, 
And all the water bear 

That thou, love, drinkest ! " 

IX. 

" When thou, a stream, dost feed 

The flower yonder, 
I will turn cloud straightway, 
And to America 

Away I'll wander." 

X. 

" Though thou to India 

Fly from thy lover, 
Still I will follow thee : 
I the sea-breeze will be 

To waft thee over 1 " 

XI. 

" I can outstrip the breeze 

Fast as it flieth : 
I'll be the swift sun-ray 
That melts the ice away 

And the grass drieth ! " 

XII. 

" Sunlight if thou become, 

Are my wiles ended ? 
I'll be a lizard green, 
And quaff the golden sheen 
To make me splendid ! " 



THE COCOONING. 63 

XIII. 

"Be thou a Triton, hid 

In the dark sedges ! 
I'm the moon by whose ray 
Fairies and witches pay 

Their mystic pledges ! " 

XIV. 

" If thou the moon wilt be 

Sailing in glory, 
I'll be the halo white 
Hovering every night 

Around and o'er thee ! " 

XV. 

" Yet shall thy shadowy arm 

Embrace me never ! 
I will turn virgin rose, 
And all my thorns oppose 

To thee for ever ! " 

XVI. 

" If thou become a rose, 

Vain too shall this be ! 
Seest thou not that I, 
As a bright butterfly, 

Freely may kiss thee ? " 

XVII. 

" Urge, then, thy mad pursuit : 

Idly thou'lt follow ! 
I'll in the deep wood bide ; 
I'll in the old oak hide, 

Gnarled and hollow. " 



64 MiRfcio. 

XVIII. 

" In the dim forest glade 

Wilt thou be hidden ? 
I'll be the ivy -vine, 
And my long arms entwine 
Round thee unbidden ! " 



XIX.' 

" Fold thine arms tightly, then : 

Clasp the oak only ! 
I'll a white sister be ! 
Far off in St. Blasi, 

Secure and lonely 1 " 

XX. 

" Be thou a white-veiled nun 

Come to confession, 
I will be there as priest, 
Thee freely to divest 

Of all transgression ! " 

The startled women their cocoons let fall. 

" Noro, make haste ! " outspake they one and all : 

" What could our hunted Magali answer then ? 

A nun, poor dear, who had already been 

A cloud, a bird, a fish, an oak, a flower, 

The sun, the moon, the stream, in one short hour? ' 

" Ah, yes ! " said Noro, " I the rest will sing : 

She was, I think, the cloister entering ; 

And that mad fowler dared to promise her 

He would in the confessional appear, 

And shrive her. Therefore hear what she replies : 

The maid hath yet another last device : " 



THE COCOONING. 65 

XXI. 

" Enter the sacred house ! 

I shall be sleeping, 
Robed in a winding-sheet, 
Nuns at my head and feet, 

Above me weeping." 

XXII. 

*' If thou wert lifeless dust, 

My toils were o'er : 
I'd be the yawning grave, 
Thee in my arms to have 

For evermore ! " 

XXIII. 

" Now know I thou art true, 

Leave me not yet ! 
Come, singer fair, and take, 
And wear it for my sake, 

This annulet 1 " 

XXIV. 

" Look up, my blessed one, 

The heaven scan ! 
Since the stars came to see 
Thee, O my Magali, 

They are turned wan ! " 

A silence fell, the sweet song being ended : 

Only with the last moving notes had blended 

The voices of the rest. Their heads were drooping, 

As they before the melody were stooping, 

Like slender reeds that lean and sway for ever 

Before the flowing eddies of a river. 



66 MIREIO. 

Till Noro said, " Now is the air serene ; 

And here the mowers come, their scythes to clean 

Beside the vivary brook. Mireio, dear, 

Bring us a few St. John's Day apples here. 

And we will add a little new-made cheese, 

And take our lunch beneath the lotus-trees." 



CANTO IV. 

The Sititors. 

\VTHEN violets are blue in the blue shadows 
VV Of the o'erhanging trees, 
The youth who stray in pairs about the meadows 
Are glad to gather these. 

When peace descends upon the troubled Ocean, 

And he his wrath forgets, 
Flock from Martigue the boats with wing-like motion, 

The fishes fill their nets. 

And when the girls of Crau bloom into beauty 

(And fairer earth knows not), 
Aye are there suitors ready for their duty 

In castle and in cot. 

Thus to Mireio's home came seeking her 
A trio notable, a horse-tamer, 
A herdsman, and a shepherd. It befell 
The last was first who came his tale to tell. 
Alari was his name, a wealthy man, 
lie had a thousand sheep, the story ran. 

The same were wont to feed the winter long 
In rich salt-pastures by Lake Entressen. 
And at wheat -boiling time, in burning May, 
Himself would often lead his flock, they say, 
Up through the hills to pastures green and high : 
They say moreover, and full faith have I, 



68 MIREIO. 

That ever as St. Mark's came round again 
Nine noted shearers Alari would retain 
Three days to shear his flock. Added to these 
A man to bear away each heavy fleece, 
And a sheep-boy who back and forward ran 
And filled the shearer's quickly emptied can. 

But when the summer heats began to fail 
And the high peaks to feel the snowy gale, 
A stately sight it was that flock to see 
Wind from the upper vales of Dauphiny, 
And o'er the Crau pursue their devious ways, 
Upon the toothsome winter grass to graze. 

Also to watch them there where they defile 
Into the stony road were well worth while ; 
The early lambkins all the rest outstripping 
And merrily about the lamb-herd leaping, 
The bell-decked asses with their foals beside, 
Or following after them. These had for guide 

A drover, who a patient mule bestrode. 
Its wattled panniers bare a motley load : 
Food for the shepherd-folk, and flasks of wine, 
And the still bleeding hides of slaughtered kine ; 
And folded garments whereon oft there lay 
Some weakly lamb, a-weary of the way. 

Next came abreast the captains of the host 
Five fiery bucks, their fearsome heads uptost : 
With bells loud jingling and with sidelong glances, 
And backward curving horns, each one advances. 
The sober mothers follow close behind, 
Striving their lawless little kids to mind. 

A rude troop and a ravenous they are, 

And these the goat -herd hath in anxious care. 



THE SUITORS. 69 

And after them there follow presently 
The great ram-chiefs, with muzzles lifted high : 
You know them by the heavy horn that lies 
Thrice curved about the ear in curious wise. 

Their ribs and backs with tufts of wool are decked, 
That they may have their meed of due respect 
As the flock's grandsires. Plain to all beholders, 
With sheepskin cloak folded about his shoulders, 
Strides the chief-shepherd next, with lordly swing ; 
The main corps of his army following. 

Tumbling through clouds of dust, the great ewe-dams 

Call with loud bleatings to their bleating lambs. 

The little horned ones are gayly drest, 

With tiny tufts of scarlet on the breast 

And o'er the neck. While, filling the next place, 

The woolly sheep advance at solemn pace. 

Amid the tumult now and then the cries 
Of shepherd-boy to shepherd-dog arise. 
For now the pitch-marked herd innumerable 
Press forward : yearlings, two-year-olds as well, 
Those who have lost their lambs, and those who bear 
Twin lambs unborn, and wearily they fare. 

A ragamuffin troop brings up the rear. 
The barren and past-breeding ewes are here, 
The lame, the toothless, and the remnant sorry 
Of many a mighty ram, lean now and hoary, 
Who from his earthly labours long hath rested, 
Of honour and of horns alike divested. 

All these who fill the road and mountain-passes 

Old, young, good, bad, and neither ; sheep, goats, asses 

Are Alari's, every one. He stands the while 

And watches them, a hundred in a file, 

Pass on before him ; and the man's eyes laugh. 

His wand of office is a maple staff. 



70 MIREIO. 

And when to pasture with his dogs hies he, 
And leathern gaiters buttoned to the knee, 
His forehead to an ample wisdom grown 
And air serene might be King David's own, 
When in his youth he led, as the tale tells, 
The flocks at eve beside his father's wells. 

This was the chief toward Lotus Farm who drew, 
And presently Mireio's self who knew 
Flitting about the doorway. His heart bounded. 
"Good Heaven!" he cried, "her praises they have 

sounded 

Nowise too loudly ! Ne'er saw I such grace 
Or high or low, in life or pictured face ! " 

Only that face to see, his flock forsaking, 
Alari had come. Yet now his heart was quaking 
When, standing in the presence of the maid, 
" Would you so gracious be, fair one," he said, 
" As to point out the way these hills to cross? 
For else find I myself at utter loss." 

" Oh, yes ! " replied the girl, ingenuously, 

" Thou takest the straight road, and comest thereby 

Into Peiro-malo desert. Then 

Follow the winding path till thou attain 

A portico with an old tomb anear : 

Two statues of great generals it doth bear. 

Antiquities they call them hereabout." 

" Thanks, many ! " said the youth. " I had come out 

A thousand of my woolly tribe, or so, 

To lead into the mountains from La Crau. 

We leave to-morrow. I their way direct, 

And sleeping-spots and feeding-ground select. 

" They bear my mark, and are of fine breed, all ; 
And for my shepherdess, when one I call 



THE SUITORS. 71 

My own, the nightingales will ever sing. 

And dared I hope you'd take my offering, 

Mireio dear, no gems I'd tender you, 

But a carved box-wood cup, mine own work too ! " 

Therewith he brought to light a goblet fair, 
Wrapped like some sacred relic with all care, 
And carven of box-wood green. It was his pleasure 
Such things to fashion in his hours of leisure ; 
And, sitting rapt upon some wayside stone, 
He wrought divinely with a knife alone. 

He carved him castanets with ringers light, 

So that his flock would follow him at night 

Through the dark fields, obedient to their tones. 

And on the ringing collars, and the bones 

That served for bell-tongues, he would cut with skill 

Faces and figures, flowers and birds, at will. 

As for the goblet he was tendering, 

You would have said that no such fairy thing 

Was ever wrought by shepherd's knife or wit : 

A full-flowered poppy wreathed the rim of it ; 

And in among the languid flowers there 

Two chamois browsed, and these the handles were. 

A little lower down were maidens three, 
And certes they were marvellous to see : 
Near by, beneath a tree, a shepherd-lad 
Slept, while on tiptoe stole the maidens glad, 
And sought to seal his lips, ere he should waken, 
With a grape-cluster from their basket taken. 

Yet even now he smiles at their illusion, 
So that the foremost maid is all confusion. 
The odour of the goblet proved it new : 
The giver had not drunk therefrom ; and you 
Had said, but for their woody colouring, 
The carven shapes were each a living thing. 



72 



Mireio scanned the fair cup curiously. 

" A tempting offering thine, shepherd ! " said she : 

But suddenly, "A finer one than this 

Hath my heart's lord ! Shepherd, his love it is ! 

Mine eyes close, his impassioned glances feeling : 

I falter with the rapture o'er me stealing ! " 

So saying, she vanished like a tricksy sprite ; 
And Alari turned, and in the gray twilight 
Ruefully, carefully, he folded up 
And bore away again his carven cup, 
Deeming it sad and strange this winsome elf 
Her love should yield to any but himself. 

Soon to the farm came suitor number two, 
A keeper of wild horses from Sambu, 
Veran, by name. About his island bower 
In the great prairies, where the asters flower, 
He used to keep a hundred milk-white steeds, 
Who nipped the heads of all the lofty reeds. 

A hundred steeds ! Their long manes flowing free 
As the foam-crested billows of the sea ! 
Wavy and thick and all unshorn were they ; 
And when the horses on their headlong way 
Plunged all together, their dishevelled hair 
Seemed the white robes of creatures of the air. 

I say it to the shame of human kind : 
Camargan steeds were never known to mind 
The cruel spur more than the coaxing hand. 
Only a few or so, I understand, 
By treachery seduced, have halter worn, 
And from their own salt prairies been borne ; 

Yet the day comes when, with a vicious start, 
Their riders throwing, suddenly they part, 



THE SUITORS. 73 

And twenty leagues of land unresting scour, 
Snuffing the wind, till Vacares once more 
They find, the salt air breathe, and joy to be 
In freedom after ten years' slavery. 

For these wild steeds are with the sea at home : 
Have they not still the colour of the foam ? 
Perchance they brake from old King Neptune's car ; 
For when the sea turns dark and moans afar, 
And the ships part their cables in the bay, 
The stallions of Camargue rejoicing neigh, 

Their sweeping tails like whipcord snapping loudly ; 
Or pawing the earth, all, fiercely and proudly, 
As though their flanks were stung as with a rod 
By the sharp trident of the angry god, 
\Vho makes the rain a deluge, and the ocean 
Stirs to its depths in uttermost commotion. 

And these were all Veran's. Therefore one day 

The island-chieftain paused upon his way 

Across La Crau beside Mireio's door ; 

For she was famed, and shall be evermore, 

For beauty, all about the delta wide 

Where the great Rhone meeteth the ocean tide. 

Confident came Veran to tell his passion, 

With paletot, in the Arlesian fashion, 

Long, light, and backward from his shoulders flowing ; 

His gay-hued girdle like a lizard glowing, 

The while his head an oil-skin cap protected, 

Wherefrom the dazzling sun-rays were reflected. 

And first the youth to Master Ramoun drew. 
" Good-morrow to you, and good fortune too 1 " 
He said. " I come from the Camargan Rhone, 
As keeper Peire's grandson I am known. 
Thou mindest him 1 For twenty years or more 
My grandsire's horses trod thy threshing-floor. 
D 



74 MIREIO. 

" Three dozen had the old man venerable, 
As thou, beyond a doubt, rememberest well. 
But would I, Master Ramoun, it were given 
To thee to see the increase of that leaven ! 
Let ply the sickles ! We the rest will do, 
For now have we an hundred lacking two ! " 

" And long, my son," the old man said, " pray I 

That you may see them feed and multiply. 

I knew your grandsire well for no brief time ; 

But now on him and me the hoary rime 

Of age descends, and by the home lamp's ray 

We sit content, and no more visits pay." 

"But, Master Ramoun," cried the youthful lover, 
" All that I want thou dost not yet discover ! 
For down at Sambu, in my island home, 
When the Crau folk for loads of litter come, 
And we help cord them down, it happens so 
We talk sometimes about the girls of Crau. 

" And thy Mireio they have all portrayed 
So charmingly, that, if thou wilt," he said, 
"And if thou like me, I would gladly be 
Thy son-in-law 1 " " God grant me this to see ! " 
Said Ramoun. " The brave scion of my friend 
To me and mine can only honour lend." 

Then did he fold his hands and them upraise 
In saint-like gratitude. " And yet," he says, 
" The child must like you too, O Veranet ! 
The only one will alway be a pet ! 
Meanwhile, in earnest of the dower I'll give her, 
The blessing of the saints be yours for ever ! " 

Forthwith summoned Ramoun his little daughter, 
And told her of the friend who thus had sought her. 



THE SUITORS. 75 

Pale, trembling, and afraid, " O father dear ! " 
She said, " is not thy wisdom halting here ? 
For I am but a child : thou dost forget. 
Surely thou wouldst not send me from thee yet ! 

" Slowly, so thou hast often said to me, 

Folk learn to love and live in harmony. 

For one must know, and also must be known ; 

And even then, my father, all's not done ! " 

Here the dark shadow on her brow was lit 

By some bright thought that e'en transfigured it. 

So the drenched flowers, when morning rains are o'er, 
Lift up their heavy heads, and smile once more. 
Mireid's mother held her daughter's view, 
Then blandly rose the keeper, " Adieu, 
Master," he said: " who in Camargue hath dwelt 
Knows the mosquito-sting as soon as felt." 

Also that summer came to Lotus Place 
One from Petite Camargue, named Ourrias. 
Breaker and brander of wild cattle, he ; 
And black and furious all the cattle be 
Over those briny pastures wild who run, 
Maddened by flood and fog and scalding sun. 

Alone this Ourrias had them all in charge 
Summer and winter, where they roamed at large. 
And so, among the cattle born and grown, 
Their build, their cruel heart, became his own ; 
His the wild eye, dark colour, dogged look. 
How often, throwing off his coat, he took 

His cudgel, savage weaner 1 never blenching, 

And first the young calves from the udders wrenching, 

Upon the wrathful mother fell so madly 

That cudgel after cudgel brake he gladly, 

Till she, by his brute fury mastered, 

\Vild-eyed and lowing to the pine-copse fled ! 



76 Mmfcio. 

Oft in the branding at Camargue had he 
Oxen and heifers, two-year-olds and three, 
Seized by the horns and stretched upon the ground. 
His forehead bare the scar of an old wound 
Fiery and forked like lightning. It was said 
That once the green plain with his blood was red. 

On a great branding-day befell this thing : 

To aid the mighty herd in mustering, 

Li Santo, Agui Morto, Albaron, 

And Faraman a hundred horsemen strong 

Had sent into the desert. And the herd 

Roused from its briny lairs, and, forward spurred 

By tridents of the branders close behind, 

Fell on the land like a destroying wind. 

Heifers and bulls in headlong gallop borne 

Plunged, crushing centaury and salicorne ; 

And at the branding-booth at last they mustered, 

Just where a crowd three hundred strong had clustered. 

A moment, as if scared, the beasts were still. 
Then, when the cruel spur once more they feel, 
They start afresh, into a run they break, 
And thrice the circuit of the arena make ; 
As marterns fly a dog, or hawks afar 
By eagles in the Luberon hunted are. 

Then Ourrias what ne'er was done before 
Leaped from his horse beside the circus-door 
Amid the crowd. The cattle start again, 
All saving five young bulls, and scour the plain ; 
But these, with flaming eyes and horns defying 
Heaven itself, are through the arena flying. 

And he pursues them. As a mighty wind 
Drives on the clouds, he goads them from behind, 



THE SUITORS. 77 

And presently outstrips them in the race ; 

Then thumps them with the cruel goad he sways, 

Dances before them as infuriate, 

And lets them feel his own fists' heavy weight. 

The people clap and shout, while Ourrias 
White with Olympic dust encountered has 
One bull, and seized him by the horns at length ; 
And now 'tis head to muzzle, strength for strength. 
The monster strans his prisoned horns to free 
Until he bleeds, and bellows horribly. 

But vain his fury, useless all his trouble I 
The neatherd had the art to turn and double 
And force the huge head with his shoulder round, 
And shove it roughly back, till on the ground 
Christian and beast together rolled, and made 
A formless heap like some huge barricade. 

The tamarisks are shaken by the cry 

Of " Bravo Ourrias ! That's done valiantly ! " 

While five stout youths the bull pin to the sward ; 

And Ourrias, his triumph to record, 

Seizes the red-hot iron with eager hand, 

The vanquished monster on the hip to brand. 

Then came a troop of girls on milk-white ponies, 
Arlesians, flushed and panting every one is, 
As o'er the arena at full gallop borne 
They offer him a noble drinking-horn 
Brimful of wine ; then turn and disappear, 
Each followed by her faithful cavalier. 

The hero heeds them not. His mind is set 
On the four monsters to be branded yet : 
The mower toils the harder for the grass 
He sees unmown. And so this Ourrias 
Fought the more savagely as his foes warmed, 
And conquered in the end, but not unharmed. 



78 MIREIO. 

White-spotted and with horns magnificent, 

The fourth beast grazed the green in all content. 

" Now, man, enough ! " in vain the neatherds shouted ; 

Couched is the trident and the caution flouted ; 

With perspiration streaming, bosom bare, 

Ourrias the spotted bull charged then and there ! 

He meets his enemy, a blow delivers 
Full in the face ; but ah ! the trident shivers. 
The beast becomes a demon with the wound : 
The brander grasps his horns, is whirled around, 
They start together, and are borne amain, 
Crushing the salicornes along the plain. 

The mounted herdsmen, on their long goads leaning, 

Regard the mortal fray ; for each is meaning 

Dire vengeance now. The man the brute would crush, 

The brute bears off the man with furious rush ; 

The while with heavy, frothy tongue he clears 

The blood that to his hanging lip adheres. 

The brute prevailed. The man fell dazed, and lay 
Like a vile rakeful in the monster's way. 
" Sham dead ! " went up a cry of agony. 
Vain words ! The beast his victim lifted high 
On cruel horns and savage head inclined, 
And flung him six and forty feet behind ! 

Once more a deafening outcry filled the place 
And shook the tamarisks. But Ourrias 
Fell prone to earth, and ever after wore Le 
The ugly scar that marred his brow so sordy. 
Now, mounted on his mare, he paces slo'.v 
With goad erect to seek Mireio. 

It chanced the little maid was al! alone. 
She had, that morning, to the fountain gone ; 



THE SUITORS. 79 

And here, with sleeves and petticoats uprolled 
And small feet dabbling in the water cold, 
She was her cheese-forms cleaning with shave-grass ; 
And, lady saints ! how beautiful she was ! 

"Good-morrow, pretty maid ! " began the wooer, 
" Thy forms will shine like mirrors, to be sure ! 
Will it offend thee, if I lead my mare 
To drink out of thy limpid streamlet there ? " 
" Pray give her all thou wilt, at the dam head : 
We've water here to spare ! " the maiden said. 

" Fair one ! " spake the wild youth, " if e'er thou come 

As pilgrim or as bride to make thy home 

At Sylvareal by the noisy wave, 

No life of toil like this down here thou'lt have ! 

Our fierce black cows are never milked, but these 

Roam all at large, and women sit at ease." 

"Young man, in cattle-land, I've heard them say, 
Maids die of languor." " Pretty maiden, nay : 
There is no languor where two are together ! " 
" But brows are blistered in that burning weather, 
And bitter waters drunk." " When the sun shines, 
My lady, thou shall sit beneath the pines 1 " 

" Ah ! but they say, young man, those pines are laden 
With coils of emerald serpents." " Fairest maiden, 
We've herons also, and flamingoes red 
That chase them down the Rhone with wings outspread 
Like rosy scarfs." " Then, I would have thee know 
Lotus and pine too far asunder grow 1 " 

" But priests and maids, my beauty, ne'er can tell, 
The saw affirms, the land where they may dwell 
And eat their bread." " Let mine but eaten be 
With him I love : that were enough," said she, 
" To lure me from the home-nest to remove." 
" If that be so, sweet one, give me thy love ! " 



8o MIREIO. 

"Thy suit," Mireio said, "mayhap I'll grant! 
But first, young man, yon water-lily plant 
Will bear a cluster of columbine grapes. 
Yon hills will melt from all their solid shapes, 
That goad will flower, and all the world will go 
In boats unto the citadel of Baux ! " 



CANTO V. 
The Battle. 

COOL with the coming eve the wind was blowing, 
The shadows of the poplars longer growing ; 
Yet still the westering sun was two hours high, 
As the tired ploughman noted wistfully, 
Two hours of toil ere the fresh twilight come, 
And wifely greeting by the door at home. 

But Ourrias the brander left the spring, 

The insult he had suffered pondering. 

So moved to wrath was he, so stung with shame, 

The blood into his very forehead came ; 

And, muttering deadly spite beneath his teeth, 

He drave at headlong gallop o'er the heath. 

As damsons in a bush, the stones of Crau 

Are plentiful ; and Ourrias, fuming so, 

Would gladly with the senseless flints have striven, 

Or through the sun itself his lance have driven. 

A wild boar from its lair forced to decamp, 

And scour the desert slopes of black Oulympe. 

Ere turning on the dogs upon his track, 
Erects the rugged bristles of his back, 
And whets his tusks upon the mountain oaks. 
And now young Vincen with his comely looks 
Must needs have chosen the herdsman's very path, 
And meets him squarely, boiling o'er with wrath. 



82 MlREIO. 

Whereas the simple dreamer wandered smiling, 
His memory with a sweet tale beguiling, 
That he had heard a fond girl whispering 
Beneath a mulberry-tree one morn in spring. 
Straight is he as a cane from the Durance ; 
And love, peace, joy, beam from his countenance. 

The soft air swells his loose, unbottoned shirt : 
His firm, bare feet are by the stones unhurt, 
And light as lizard slips he o'er the way. 
Oh ! many a time, when eve was cool and gray, 
And all the land in shadow lay concealed, 
He used to roam about the darkling field, 

Where the chill airs had shut the tender clover ; 
Or, like a butterfly, descend and hover 
Around the homestead of Mireio ; 
Or, hidden cleverly, his hiding show, 
Like a gold-crested or an ivy wren, 
By a soft chirrup uttered now and then. 

And she would know who called her, and would fly 
Swift, silent, to the mulberry-tree hard by, 
With quickened pulses. Fair is the moonlight 
Upon narcissus-buds in summer night, 
And sweet the rustle of the zephyr borne 
In summer eve over the ripening corn, 

Until the whole, in infinite undulation, 

Seems like a great heart palpitant with pp.:- ion. 

Also the chamois hath a joy most keen 

When through the Queiras, that most wild ravine 

All day before the huntsman he hath flown, 

And stands at length upon a peak, alone 

With larches and with ice fields, looking f >rth. 
But all these joys and charms are little worth, 



THE BATTLE. 83 

With the brief rapture of the hours compared 
Ah, brief ! that Vincen and Mireio shared, 
When, by the friendly shadows favoured, 
(Speak low, my lips, for trees can hear, 'tis said,) 

Their hands would seek each other and would meet, 

And silence fall upon them, while their feet 

Played idly with the pebbles in their way. 

Until, not knowing better what to say, 

The tyro-lover laughingly would tell 

Of all the small mishaps that him befell ; 

Of nights he passed beneath the open heaven ; 
Of bites the farmers' dogs his legs had given, 
And show his scars. And then the maid told o'er 
Her tasks of that day and the day before ; 
And what her parents said ; and how the goat 
With trellis-flowers had filled his greedy throat. 

Once only Vincen knew not what he did ; 

But, stealthy as a wild-cat, he had slid 

Along the grasses of the barren moor, 

And prostrate lay his darling's feet before. 

Then soft, my lips, because the trees can hear 

He said, " Give me one kiss, Mireio dear ! 

"I cannot eat nor drink," he made his moan, 
" For the great love I bear you ! Yea, mine own, 
Your breath the life out of my blood has taken. 
Go not, Mireio ! Leave me not forsaken ! 
From dawn to dawn, at least, let a true lover 
Kneel, and your garment's hem with kisses cover ! ' 

" Why, Vincen," said Mireio, " that were sin ! 
Then would the black-cap and the penduline 
Tell everywhere the secret they had heard ! " 
" No fear of that ! for every tell-tale bird 
I'd banish from La Crau to Aries," said he ; 
" For you, Mireio, are as heaven to me ! 



84 MIREIO. 

" Now list ! There grows a plant in river Rhone, 
Eel-grass, the name whereby that plant is known, 
Two flowers it beareth, each on its own stem, 
And a great space of water severs them, 
For the plant springs out of the river's bed ; 
But when the time for wooing comes," he said, 

" One flower leaps to the surface of the flood, 
And in the genial sunshine opes its bud. 
Whereon the other, seeing this so fair, 
Swims eagerly to seize and kiss her there ; 
But, for the tangled weeds, can she not gain 
Her love, till her frail stem breaks with the strain. 

" Now free at last, but dying, she doth raise 
Her pale lips for her sister's last embrace. 
So I ! One kiss, and I will die to-night ! 
We are all alone ! " Mireio's cheek grew white. 
Then sprang he, wild-eyed as a lissome beast, 
And clasped her. Hurriedly the maid released 

Herself from his too daring touch. Once more 

He strove to seize, but ah ! my lips, speak lower, 

For the trees hear, " Give over ! " cried the girl, 

And all her slender frame did writhe and curl. 

Yet would he frantic cling ; but straight thereafter 

She pinched him, bent, slipped, and, with ringing laughter, 

The saucy little damsel sped away, 
And lifted up her voice in mocking lay. 
So did these two, upon the twilight wold 
Their moon-wheat sow, after the proverb old. 
Flowery the moments were, and fleet with pleasure : 
Of such our Lord giveth abundant measure 

To peasants and to kings alike. And so 
I come to what befell that eve on Crau. 



THE BATTLE. 85 

Ourrias and Vincen met. As lightning cleaves 
The first tall tree, Ourrias his wrath relieves. 
" Tis you son of a hag, for aught I know, 
Who have bewitched her, this Mireio ; 

" And since your path would seem to lie her way, 
Tell her, tatterdemalion, what I say ! 
No more for her nor for her weasel face 
Care I than for the ancient clout," he says, 
" That from your shoulders fluttering I see. 
Go, pretty coxcomb, tell her this from me !" 

Stopped Vincen thunderstruck. His wrath leaped high 

As leaps a fiery rocket to the sky. 

" Is it your pleasure that I strangle you, 

Base churl,' he said, " or double you in two? " 

And faced him with a look he well might dread, 

As when a starving leopard turns her head. 

His face was purple, quivered all his frame. 
" Oh, better try ! " the mocking answer came. 
" You'll roll headfirst upon the gravel, neighbour ! 
Bah, puny hands ! meet for no better labour 
Than to twist osiers when they're supple made ; 
Or to rob hen-roosts, lurking in the shade ! " 

Stung by the insult, "Yea, I can twist osier, 
And I can twist your neck with all composure," 
Said Vincen. " Coward, it were well you ran ! 
Else vow I by St. James the GalHcan, 
You'll never see your tamarisks any more ! 
This iron first shall bray your limbs before ! " 

Wondering, and charmed to find by such quick chance 

A man whereon to wreak his vengeance, 

" Wait ! " said the herdsman : " be not over-hot ! 

First let me have a pipe, young idiot ! " 

And brought to light a buckskin pouch, and set 

Between his teeth a broken calumet. 



86 MiRfcio. 

Then scornfully, "While rocking you, my lamb, 
Under the goose-foot, did your gypsy-dam 
Ne'er tell the tale of Jan de 1'Ouis, I pray ? 
Two men in one, who, having gone one day, 
By orders, to plough stubble with two yoke, 
Seized plough and teams, as shepherds do a crook, 

" And hurled them o'er a poplar-tree hard by ? 
Well for you, urchin, there's no poplar nigh ! 
You couldn't lead a stray ass whence it came ! " 
But Vincen stood like pointer to the game. 
"I say," he roared in tones stentorian, 
" Will you come down, or must I fetch you, man 

" Or hog ? Come ! Brag no more your beast astride 
You flinch now we are going to decide 
Which sucked the better milk, or you or I? 
Was it you, bearded scoundrel ? We will try ! 
Why, I will tread you like a sheaf of wheat, 
If you dare flout yon maiden true and sweet. 

" No fairer flower in this land blossomed ever ; 
And I who am called Vincen, basket-weaver, 
Yes, I her suitor, be it understood 
Will wash your slanders out in your own blood, 
If such you have ! " Quoth Qurrias, " I am ready, 
My gypsy-suitor to a cupboard ! Steady ! " 

Therewith alights. They fling their coats away, 
Fists fly, and pebbles roll before the fray. 
They fall upon each other in the manner 
Of two young bulls who, in the vast savannah, 
Where the great sun glares in the tropic sky, 
The sleek sides of a dark young heifer spy 

In the tall grasses, lowing amorous. 

The thunder bursts within them, challenged thus. 



THE BATTLE. 87 

Mad, blind with love, they paw, they stare, they spring ; 
And furious charge, their muzzles lowering ; 
Retire, and charge again. The ominous sound 
Of crashing horns fills all the spaces round. 

And long, I ween, the battle is, and dire. 
The combatants are maddened by desire. 
Puissant Love urges and goads them on. 
So here, with either doughty champion. 
'Twas Ourrias who received the first hard touch ; 
And, being threatened with another such, 

Lifts his huge fist and lays young Vincen flat 

As with a club. " There, urchin, parry that ! " 

" See if I have a scratch, man ! " cried the lad. 

The other, " Bastard, count the knocks you've had ! " 

" Count you the ounces of hot blood," he shouted, 

" Monster, that from your flattened nose have spouted ! " 

And then they grapple ; bend and stretch their best, 
With foot to foot, shoulder to shoulder, prest. 
Their arms are wreathed and coiled like serpents fell 
The veins within their necks to bursting swell 
And tense their muscles with the mighty strain. 
Long time they stiff and motionless remain, 

With pulsing flanks, like flap of bustard's wing. 
And, one against the other steadying, 
Bear up like the abutments huge and wide 
Of that great bridge the Gardoun doth bestride. 
Anon they part : their doubled fists upraise, 
Once more the pestle in the mortar brays, 

And in their fury ply they tooth or nail. 
Good God ! the blows of Vincen fall like hail. 
Yet ah ! what club-like hits the herdsman deals ! 
And, as their crushing weight the weaver feels, 
He whirls as whirls a sling about his foe, 
And backward bends to deal his fiercest blow. 



88 MIREIO. 

" Look your last, villain ! " Ere the word said he, 

The mighty herdsman seized him bodily, 

And flung him o'er his shoulder far away, 

As a Proven9al shovels wheat. He lay 

A moment on his side, not sorely hurt. 

" Pick up, O worm ! " cried Ourrias, " pick the dirt 

"You have displaced, and eat it, if you will !" 
" Enough of that ! Brute who was broken ill, 
We'll have three rounds before this game is over ! " 
With bitter hate retorts the poor boy-lover ; 
And, reddening to his very hair for shame, 
Rears like a dragon to retrieve his fame. 

And, daring death, he on the brute hath flown, 
And dealt a blow marvellous in such an one 
Straight from the shoulder to the other's breast, 
Who reeled and groped for that whereon to rest, 
With darkening eyes and brow cold-beaded, till 
He crashed to earth, and all La Crau was still. 

Its misty limit blent with the far sea ; 
The sea's with the blue ether, dreamily. 
Still in mid-air there floated shining things, 
Swans, and flamingoes on their rosy wings, 
Come to salute the last of the sunset 
Along the desert meres that glimmered yet. 

The white mare of the herdsman lazily 

Pulled at the dwarf-oak leaves that grew thereby : 

The iron stirrups of the creature jangled, 

As loose and heavy at her sides they dangled. 

" Stir, and I crush you, ruffian ! " Vincen said : 

" 'Tis not by feet that men are measured ! " 

Then in the silent wold the victor pressed 
His heel upon the brander's prostrate breast, 



THE BATTLE. 89 

Who writhed beneath it vainly, while the blood 
Sluggish and dark from lips and nostrils flowed. 
Thrice did he strive the horny foot to move, 
And thrice the basket-weaver from above 

Dealt him a blow that levelled him once more, 

Until he haggard lay, and gasping sore 

Like some sea-monster. " So your mother, then, 

Was not, it seems, the only mould of men," 

Said Vincen, jeeringly. " Go tell the tale 

Of my fist's weight to bulls in Sylvareal. 

" Go to the waste of the Camargan isle, 

And hide your bruises and your shame awhile 

Among your beasts ! " So saying, he loosed his hold, 

As some great ram, a shearer in the fold 

Pins with his knees till shorn ; then, with a blow 

Upon the crupper, bids him freely go. 

Bursting with rage and all defiled with dust, 

The herdsman went his ways. But wherefore must 

He linger ferreting about the heath, 

Amid the oaks and broom, under his breath 

Muttering curses ? until suddenly 

He stoops, then swings his savage trident high, 

And darts on Vincen. For him all is done. 
Vain were the hope that murderous lance to shun, 
And the boy paled as on the day he died ; 
Not fearing death, but that he could not bide 
The treachery. A felon's prey to be ! 
That stung the manly soul to agony. 

" Traitor, you dare not ! " But the lad restrains 

The word, firm as a martyr in his pains ; 

For yon's the farmstead hidden by the trees. 

Tenderly, wistfully, he turns to these. 

" O my Mireio ! " said the eager eye, 

" Look hither, darling, 'tis for you I die ! " 



90 MIREIO. 

Great heart, intent as ever on his love ! 

" Say your prayers ! " thundered Ourrias from above 

In a hoarse voice, and pitiless to hear, 

And pierced the victim with his iron spear. 

Then, with a heavy groan, the fated lover 

Upon the green-sward rolled, and all was over. 

The beaten grass is dark with human gore, 
And the field-ants already coursing o'er 
The prostrate limbs ere Ourrias mounts, and hies 
Under the rising moon in frantic wise ; 
Muttering, as the flints beneath him fly, 
"To-night the Crau wolves will feast merrily." 

Deep stillness reigned in Crau. Its limit dim 
Blent with the sea's on the horizon's rim, 
The sea's with the blue ether. Gleaming things, 
Swans, and flamingoes on their ruddy wings, 
Came to salute the last declining light 
Among the desert meres that glimmered white. 

Away, Ourrias, away ! Draw not the rein, 

Urge thy unresting gallop o'er the plain, 

While the green heron shout their fearsome cries 

In thy mare's ear, as the good creature flies, 

Till her ear trembles, and her nostrils quiver, 

And eyes dilate. That night the great Rhone River 

Slept on his stony bed beneath the moon, 

As pilgrim of Sainte Baume may lay him down, 

Fevered and weary, in a deep ravine. 

" Ho ! " cries the ruffian to three boatmen seen, 

' ' Ho 1 Boat ahoy ! We must cross, hark ye there ! 

On board or in the hold, I and my mare ! " 

" On board, my hearty, then, without delay ! 

There shines the night-lamp ! And lured by its ray," 



THE BATTLE. 91 

Answered a cheery voice, " about our prow 

And oars the fish frisk playfully enow. 

It is good fishing, and the hour is fair. 

On board at once 1 We have no time to spare. " 

Therewith upon the poop the villain clomb. 
While, tethered to the stern, amid the foam 
Swam the white mare. Now fishes huge and scaly 
Forsook their grottoes, and leaped upward gayly, 
And flashed on the smooth surface of the stream. 
"Have a care, pilot ! For this craft I deem 

" Nowise too sound." And he who spake once more 
Lay foot to stretcher, bent the supple oar. 
" So I perceive. Ah ! " was the pilot's word, 
" I tell thee we've an evil freight on board." 
No more. And all the while the vessel old 
Staggered and pitched and like a drunkard rolled. 

A crazy craft ! Rotten its timbers all. 
" Thunder of God ! " Ourrias began to call, 
Seizing the helm his tottering feet to stay. 
Whereon the boat in some mysterious way 
Seemed moved to writhing, as a wounded snake 
W T hose back a shepherd with a stone doth break. 

"Doth all this tumult, comrades, bode disaster?" 
Appealed the brander, growing pale as plaster. 
" And will you drown me ? " Brake the pilot out, 
" I cannot hold the craft ! She springs about 
And wriggles like a carp. Villain, I know 
You've murdered some one, and not long ago ! " 

" Who told you that ? May Satan if I have 

Thrust me with his pitch-fork beneath the wave." 

" Ah ! " said the livid pilot, " then I err ! 

I had forgot the cause of all this stir. 

'Tis Saint Medard's to-night, when poor drowned men 

Come from their dismal pits to land again, 



92 MlREIO. 

" How deep and dark soe'er their watery prison. 
Look ! Even now hath from the wave arisen 
The long procession of the weeping dead I 
Barefoot, poor things 1 the shingly shore they tread, 
The turbid water dripping, dripping, see, 
From matted hair and stained clothes heavily. 

" See them defile under the poplars tall, 
Carrying lighted tapers, one and all. 
While up the river's bank, now and anon, 
Eagerly clambereth another one. 
"Tis they who toss our wretched craft about 
So like a raging storm, I make no doubt. 

" Their cramped legs and their mottled arms ah, see !- 
And heavy heads they from the weeds would free. 
Oh, how they watch the stars as on they go, 
Quaff the fresh air and thrill at sight of Crau, 
And scent the harvest odours the winds bring, 
In their brief hour of motion revelling ! 

" And still the water from their garments raineth, 
And still another and another gaineth 
The river-bank. And there," the boatman moans, 
"Are the old men, women, and little ones: 
They spurn the clinging mud. Ah me ! " he said, 
" Yon ghastly things abhor the fisher's trade. 

" The lamprey and the perch they made their game, 
A nd now are they become food for the same. 
But what is this ? Another piteous band, 
Travelling in a line along the sand ? 
Ah, yes ! the poor deserted maids," quoth he, 
" Who asked the Rhone for hospitality, 

" And sought to hide their shame in the great river. 
Alas ! alas ! They seem to moan for ever. 



THE BATTLE. 93 

And, oh, how painfully, fond hearts, ill fated, 
Labour the bosoms by the dank weeds weighted ! 
Is it the water dripping that one hears 
From their long veils of hair, or is it tears ? " 

He ceased. The wending souls bare each a light, 

Intently following in the silent night 

The river-shore. And those two listening 

Might even have heard the whirr of a moth's wing. 

"Are they not, pilot,' 5 asked the awe-struck brander, 

" Seeking somewhat in the gloom where they wander?" 

" Ah, yes, poor things ! " the master-boatman said. 
" See how from side to side is turned each head. 
'Tis their good works they seek, their acts of faith 
Sown upon earth ere their untimely death. 
And when they spy the same, 'tis said moreover, 
They haste thereto, as haste the sheep to clover, 

" The good work or the act of faith to cull. 
And when of such as these their hands are full, 
Lo, they all turn to flowers ! And they who gather 
Go tender them with joy to God the Father, 
Being by the flowers to Peter's gate conveyed . 
Thus those who find a watery grave," he said, 

"The gracious God granteth a respite to, 

That they may save themselves. But some anew 

Ere the day dawn will bury their good deeds 

Deep underneath the surging river-weeds. 

And some," the pilot whispered, " some are worse, 

Devourers of the needy, murderers, 

" Atheists, traitors, that worm-eaten kind. 
These hunt the river-shore, but only find 
Their sins and crimes like great stones in the gravel 
Whereon their bare feet stumble as they travel. 
The mule when dead is beaten never more ; 
But these God's mercy shall in vain implore 



94 MIREIO. 

" Under the roaring wave." Here, sore afraid, 
Ourrias a hand upon the pilot laid, 
Like robber at a turning. " Look ! " he cries, 
" There's water in the hold ! " Whereon replies 
The pilot, coolly, " And the bucket's there I " 
The herdsman bales for life in his despair. 

Ay, bale, brave Ourrias ! But there danced that night, 

On Trincataio bridge, the water-sprite. 

Madly the white mare strove to break her halter. 

" What ails you, Blanco ?" Ourrias 'gan falter. 

" Fear you the dead yonder upon the verge ? " 

Over the gunnel plashed the rising surge. 

" Captain, the craft sinks, and I cannot swim ! " 
" I know no help," the pilot answered him. 
" We must go down. But, presently," he said, 
" A cable will be heaved us by the dead, 
The dead you fear so, on the river- bank." 
And even as he spake the vessel sank. 

The tapers gleaming far and fitfully 

In the poor ghostly hands flared forth so high, 

They sent a shaft of vivid brilliance 

Across the murky river's broad expanse ; 

Then, as a spider in the morn you see 

Glide o'er his late-spun thread, the boatmen three, 

Being all spirits, leaped out of the stream, 
And caught and swooped along the dazzling beam. 
And Ourrias, too, the cable sought to seize 
Amid the gurgling waters, even as these ; 
But sought it vainly. And the water-sprite 
Danced upon Trincataio bridge that night. 



CANTO VI. 
The Witch. 

THE merry birds, until the white dawn showeth 
Clear in the east, are silent every one. 
Silent the odorous Earth until she knoweth 
In her warm heart the coming of the Sun, 
As maiden in her fairest robes bedight 
Breathless awaits her lover and her flight. 

Across La Crau three swineherds held their way 
From St. Chamas the wealthy, whither they 
Had to the market gone. Their herds were sold, 
And o'er their shoulders pouches full of gold 
Were hung, and by their hanging cloaks concealed : 
So, chatting idly, they attained the field 

Of the late strife. Suddenly one cried, " Hush ! 

Comrades, I hear a moaning in the bush." 

" 'Tis but a tolling bell," the rest averred, 

" From Saint Martin's or from Maussano heard, 

Or the north wind the dwarf-oak limbs a-swaying." 

But, ere they spake, all were their steps delaying, 

Arrested by so piteous a groan 

It rent the very heart. And every one 

Cried, " Holy Jesus ! Here has been foul play ! " 

Then crossed themselves, and gently took their way 

Toward the sound. Ah, what a sight there was ! 

Vincen, supine upon the stony grass, 



96 MIREIO. 

The grass blood-stained, the trampled earth besprent 
With willow rods. His shirt to ribbons rent, 
Stabbed in the breast, left on the moor alone, 
Had lain the poor lad through the night now gone, 
With but the stars to watch. But the dim ray 
Of early dawn, as ebbed his life away, 

Falling upon his lids had oped them wide. 

Straightway the good Samaritans turned aside 

From their home-path, stooped, and a hammock made 

Of their three cloaks, thereon the victim laid, 

Then bare him tenderly upon their arms 

Unto the nearest door, the Lotus- Farm's. . . . 

O friends, Provencal poets brave and dear, 
Who love my songs of other days to hear ! 
You, Roumanille, who blend with songs you sing 
Tears, girlish laughter, and the breath of spring ; 
And you, proud Aubanel, who stray where quiver 
The changing lights and shades of wood and river, 

To soothe a heart oppressed by love's fond dream ; 
You, Crousillat, who your beloved stream, 
The bright Touloubro, make more truly famous 
Than did the grim star-gazer Nostradamus ; 
And you, Anselme, who see, half-sad, half-smiling, 
Fair girls under the trellised arbours whiling 

Their hours away ; and you, my Paul, the witty, 

And peasant Tavan, who attune your ditty 

Unto the crickets' chirrup, while you peer 

Wistful at your poor pickaxe ; and most dear, 

Adolphe Dumas, who when Durance is deep 

With his spring flood, come back your thoughts to steep, 

And warm the Frenchman at Proven9al suns, 
"Twas you who met my own Mireio once 



THE WITCH. 97 

At your great Paris, met her tenderly, 
Where she had flown, impetuous, daring, shy ; 
And last Garcin, brave son of a brave sire, 
Whose soul mounts upward on a wind of fire ; 

Upbear me with your holy breath as now 
I climb for the fair fruit on that high bough ! . . . 
The swineherds paused at Master Ramoun's door, 
Crying, " Good-morrow ! Yonder, on the moor, 
We found this poor lad wounded in the breast. 
'Twere well that his sore hurt were quickly drest. " 

So laid their burden on the broad, flat stone. 
They tell Mireio, to the garden gone 
To gather fruit, who, basket on her side, 
Fled wildly to the spot. Thither, too, hied 
The labourers all ; but she, her basket falling, 
Stretched forth her hands on Mother Mary calling. 

" Vincen is bleeding ! Ah, what have they done ? " 
Then, lovingly, the head of the dear one 
She lifted, turned, and long and mutely gazed 
As though with horror and with grief amazed, 
Her large tears dropping fast. And well he knows 
That tender touch to be Mireio's, 

And faintly breathes, " Pity, and pray for me, 

Because I need the good God's company ! " 

" Your parched throat moisten with this cordial. Strive 

To drink," old Ramoun said : "you will revive." 

The maiden seized the cup, and drop by drop 

She made him drink, and spake to him of hope 

Till his pain lulled. " May God keep you alway 
From such distress, and your sweet care repay ! " 
Said Vincen ; and the brave boy would not tell 
It was for her sake that he fought and fell ; 
But " Splitting osier on my breast," he said, 
" The sharp knife slipped, and pierced me." Therewith 
strayed 

E 



98 MIREIO. 

His thought back to his love as bee to flower. 
" The anguish on thy face, dear, in this hour 
Is far more bitter than my wound to me. 
The pretty basket that in company 
We once began will be unfinished now. 
Would I had seen it full to overflow, 

" Dear, with thy love ! Oh, stay ! Life's in thine eyes. 
Ah, if thou couldst do something," the lad cries, 
" For him, the poor old basket-weaver there, 
My father, worn with toil 1 " In her despair, 
Mireio bathes the wound, while some bring lint, 
And some run to the hills for healing mint. 

Then the maid's mother spake : " Let four men rally, 

And to the Fairies' Cavern, in the valley 

They call Enfer, bear up this wounded man. 

The deadlier the hurt, the sooner can 

The old witch heal. Scale first the cliffs of Baux, 

And circling vultures the cave's mouth will show." 

A hole flush with the rocks, by lizards haunted, 
And veiled by tufts of rosemary thereby planted. 
For ever, since the holy Angelus swells, 
In Mary's honour from the minster-bells, 
The antique fairies have been forced to hide 
From sunlight, and in this deep cavern bide. 

Strange, airy things, they used to flit about 

Dimly, 'twixt form and substance, in and out : 

Half-earthly made, to be the visible 

Spirit of Nature ; female made as well, 

To tame the savagery of primal men. 

But these were fair in fairies' eyes, and then 

They loved : and so, infatuate, lifted not 
Mortals unto their own celestial lot ; 



THE WITCH. 99 

But, lusting, fell into our low estate, 
As birds fall, whom a snake doth fascinate, 
From their high places. But, while thus I write, 
The bearers have borne Vincen up the height. 

A dim, straight passage led the cavern toward, 
A rocky funnel where they gently lowered 
The sufferer ; and he did not go alone, 
Yet was Mireio's self the only one 
Who dared to follow down that awesome road, 
Commending, as she went, his soul to God. 

The bottom gained, they found a grotto cold 
And vast ; midway whereof a beldam old, 
The witch Taven, sat silent, crouching lowly 
As lost in thought and utter melancholy, 
Holding a sprig of brome, and muttering, 
" Some call thee devil's wheat, poor little thing, 

" Yet art thou one of God's own signs for good ! " 
Therewith Mireio, trembling where she stood, 
Was fain to tell why they had sought her thus. 
" I knew it ! " cried the witch, impervious, 
The brome addressing still, with bended head. 
" Thou poor field-flower ! The trampling flock," she 
said, 

" Browse on thy leaves and stems the whole year long; 
But all the more thou spreadest and art strong, 
And north and south with verdure deckest yet." 
She ceased. A dim light, in a snail-shell set, 
Danced o'er the dank rock-wall in lurid search : 
Here hung a sieve ; there, on a forked perch, 

Roosted a raven, a white hen beside. 

Suddenly, as if drunken, rose and cried 

The witch, " And what care I whoe'er you be ? 

Faith walketh blindfold, so doth Charity, 

Nor from her even tenor wandereth. 

Say, Valabregan weaver, have you faith ? " 



ioo Mmfcio. 

" I have." Then wildly, their pursuit inviting, 
Like a she- wolf her flanks with her tail smiting, 
Darted the hag into a deeper shaft, 
While the fowl cackled and the raven laughed 
Before her footsteps ; and the boy and maid 
Followed her through the darkness, sore afraid. 

" Stay not ! " she cried. " The time is now to find 
The mystic mandrake." And, with hands entwined, 
Obedient to the voice the two crept on, 
Through the infernal passage, till they won 
A grotto larger than the rest. " Lo ! now, 
Lord Nostradamus' plant, the golden bough, 

" The staff of Joseph and the rod of Moses ! " 

Thus crying, Taven a slender shrub discloses, 

And, kneeling, with her chaplet crowns. Then said, 

Arising, " We too must be garlanded 

With mandrake ; " and the plant in the rock's cleft 

Of three fair sprays mysteriously bereft, 

Herself crowned first, and next the wounded man, 

And last the maid. Then, crying, " Forward ! " ran 

Down the weird way, before her footsteps lit 

By shining beetles trooping over it. 

Yet turned with a sage word, "All paths of glory, 

My children, have their space of purgatory ! 

" Therefore have courage ! for we must, alas ! 
The terrors of the Sabatori pass." 
And, while she spake, their faces cut they find, 
And breathing stopped, by rush of keenest wind. 
" Lie down ! " she whispered hurriedly, " lie low ! 
The triumph of the Whirlwind Sprites is now ! " 

Then fell upon them, like a sudden gale 

Or white squall on the water fraught with hail, 



THE WITCH. 101 

A swarm of whirling, yelping, vicious things, 

Under the fanning of whose icy wings 

The mortals, drenched with sweat and struck with cold, 

Stood shivering. " Away, ye over-bold, 

" Ye spoilers of the harvest, unlicked whelps ! " 
Taven exclaimed. " Must we then use such helps 
To the fair deeds we do ? Yet, as by skill 
The sage physician bringeth good from ill, 
We witches, by our hidden arts, compel 
Evil to yield its fruit of good as well. 

" Naught's hid from us. For where the vulgar see 

A stone, a whip, a stag, a malady, 

We witches can the inner force divine 

Like that which works under the scum of wine 

In fermentation. Pierce the vat, you know, 

A seething, boiling scum will outward flow. 

" Find, if you can, the key of Solomon ! 
Or speak unto the mountain in its own 
Dread language ! It shall move at your behest, 
And roll into the valley ere it rest." 
Meanwhile they wended lower, and were 'ware 
Of a small, roguish voice a-piping there, 

Most like a goldfinch : " Our good granny spins, 

And winds and spins, and then anew begins, 

And thinks that she spins worsted night and day, 

And ha ! ha ! gossip, she spins only hay ! 

Te ! he ! spin, Aunty, spin 1 " And long-drawn laughter, 

Like whinnying of young colts, followed thereafter. 

" Why, what can that be ? " asked Mireio, 
" The little voice that laughs and jeers us so ?" 
Again the childish treble came, "Te ! he 1 
Who is this pretty mortal ? Let us see 1 
We'll raise the neckerchief a little bit : 
Are nuts and pomegranates under it ? " 



102 MlRfclO. 

Then the poor maid had nearly cried outright ; 
But the hag stayed her, " Here's no cause for fright. 
The singing, jeering thing is but a Glari : 
Fantasti is his name, a sprightly fairy. 
In his good mood he will your kitchen sweep, 
Mind fire, turn roast, and a full hen's-nest keep. 

" But what a marplot when he takes the whim ! 
He'll salt your broth just as it pleaseth him, 
Or blow your light out ere you're half in bed ! 
Or, if to vespers you would go," she said, 
" At Saint Trophime, in all your best bedight, 
He'll hide your Sunday suit, or spoil it quite ! " 

"Hear!" shrieked the imp: "now hear the old hag 

talk! 

'Tis like the creak of an ill-greased block ! 
No doubt, my withered olive," the thing said, 
" I twitch the bedclothes off a sleeping maid 
Sometimes at midnight, and she starts with fear 
And trembles, and her breast heaves. Oh, I see her ! " 

And with its whinnying laugh the sprite was gone ; 
Then, for a brief space, as they journeyed on 
Under the grots, the witcheries were stayed ; 
And in the gloomy silence, long delayed, 
They heard the water drop from vaulted roof 
To crystal ground. Now there had sat aloof, 

Upon a ledge of rock, a tall, white thing, 

Which rose in the half-light as menacing 

With one long arm. Then stiff as a quartz rock 

Stood Vincen ; while, transported by the shock, 

Mireio would have leaped a precipice, 

Had such been there. " Old scare-crow, what is this? 

" What mean you," cried Taven, " by swaying so 
Your limp head like a poplar to and fro ? " 



THE WITCH. 103 

Then turning to the stricken twain, " My dears, 
You know the Laundress ? Oft-times she appears 
On Mount Ventour, and then the common crowd 
Are wont to take her for a long, white cloud. 

" But shepherds, when they see her, pen their sheep. 
The Laundress of destruction, who doth keep 
The errant clouds in hand, is known too well. 
She scrubs them with a strength right terrible ; 
Wringing out buckets full of rain, and flame. 
And neatherds house their cattle at her name ; 

" And seamen, on the angry, tossing wave, 
Upon our Lady call, their craft to save." 
Here drowned her speech a discord most appalling, 
Rattling of latches, whimpering, caterwauling, 
With uncouth words half-uttered intervening, 
Whereof the devil only knows the meaning ; 

And brazen din through all the cave resounding, 

As one were on a witch-caldron pounding. 

Then whence those shrieks of laughter, and those wails 

As of a woman in her pains ? Prevails 

Hardly amid the howl the beldam's speech, 

" Give me a hand that I may hold you each, 

" And let your magic garlands not be lost ! " 
Here were they jostled from their feet almost 
By rush of something puffing, grunting, snorting, 
Most like a herd of ghostly swine comporting. 
On starlit winter-nights, when Nature slumbers 
Under her snowy sheets, come forth in numbers 

The fowlers, torch in hand, who bush and tree 
By river-side will beat right vigorously, 
Till all the birds at roost arise in haste, 
And, as by breath of smithy-bellows chased, 
Affrighted, rush until the net receive : 
So drave Taven the foul herd with her sieve 



IC4 MlREIO. 

Into the outer darkness. With the same 

She circles traced, luminous, red as flame, 

And divers other figures. All the while, 

" Avaunt ! " she cried, "ye locusts, ye who spoil 

The harvest ! Quit my sight, or woe betide you ! 

Workers of evil, in your burrows hide you ! 

" Since, by the pricking of your flesh, ye know 
The hills are still with sunshine all aglow, 
Go hang yourselves again on the rock-angles, 
Ye bats ! " They flit. The clamour disentangles, 
And dies away. Then to the children spake 
The witch : ' All birds of night themselves betake 

"To this retreat what time shines the daylight 
On the ploughed land and fallow ; but at night, 
At night the lamps are lighted without hand 
In churches void and triply fastened, and 
The bells toll of themselves, and pavement stones 
Upstart, and tremble all the buried bones, 

" And the poor dead arise and kneel to pray, 
And mass is said by priests as pale as they. 
Ask the owls else, who clamber down the steeple 
To drain the lamps of oil ; and if the people 
Who thus partake of the communion 
Be not all dead except the priests alone ! 

"What time the beldam jeers at February, 
Let women everywhere be wondrous wary, 
Nor fall asleep on chairs for awful reason ! 
Shepherds as well, at yon uncanny season 
Early your charges fold, and it mislike you 
A spell should motionless and rigid strike you 

f For seven years' time. The Fairies' Cavern, too, 
Looses about these days its eerie crew. 



THE WITCH. 105 

Winged or four-footed, they o'er Crau disperse ; 
While, from their lairs aroused, the sorcerers 
Gather, the farandoulo dance, and sup 
An evil potion from a golden cup. 

" The dwarf-oaks dance as well. Lord, how they trip it ! 

Meanwhile there's Garamaude in wait for Gripet. 

Fie, cruel flirt 1 Ay, seize the carrion, 

And claw her bowels out ! Now they are gone, 

Nay, but they come again 1 And, oh, despair ! 

The monster stealing through the sea-kale there, 

" The one who like a burglar crouched and ran, 
Is Bambarouche, babe- stealing harridan. 
Her wailing prey in her long claw she takes, 
Lifts on her horny head, and off she makes. 
And yon's another I She's the Nightmare-sprite 
Comes down the chimney-flue at dead of night, 

"And stealthy climbs upon the sleeper's breast, 
Who, as with weight of a tall tower opprest, 
Hath horrid dreams. Hi ! What a hideous racket I 
My dears, 'tis the foul-weather fiends who make it ! 
That sound of rusty hinges, groaning doors, 
Is they who beat up fog upon the moors, 

" And ride the winds that homestead-roofs uptear 

And bear afar. Ha, Moon 1 What ails you there ? 

What dire indignity hath made you scowl 

So red and large o'er Baux ? 'Ware the dog's howl ! 

Yon dog can snap you like a cake, be sure ! 

He minds the filthy Demon of the Sewer ! 

" Now see the holm-oaks bend their heads like ferns, 
And see that flame that leaps and writhes and burns. 
It is St. Elmo's. And that ringing sound 
Of rapid hoofs upon the stony ground 
Is the wild huntsman riding over Crau." 
Here hoarse and breathless paused the witch of Baux. 
E* 



io6 MIREIO. 

But straight thereafter, " Cover ears and eyes, 
For the black lamb is bleating ! " wildly cries. 
" That baaing lambkin ! " Vincen dared to say ; 
But she, " Hide eyes and ears without delay ! 
Woe to the stumbler here ! Sambuco's Path 
Less peril than the black horn's passage hath. 

" Tender his bleating, as you hear, and soft : 
Thereby he lures to their destruction oft 
The heedless Christians who attend his moan. 
To them he shows the sheen of Herod's throne, 
The gold of Judas, and the fatal spot 
Where Saracens made fast the golden goat. 

" Her they may milk till death, to hearts' content. 

But, when they call for their last sacrament, 

The black lamb only buts them savagely. 

And yet, so evil is the time," quoth she, 

" Unnumbered greedy souls that bait will seize, 

Burn incense unto gold, then die as these ! " 

Now, while the white hen gave three piercing crows, 

The eerie guide did to her guests disclose 

The thirteenth grotto, and the last ; and lo ! 

A huge, wide chimney and a hearth aglow, 

And seven black tom-cats warming round the flame; 

And, hanging from a 'hook above the same, 

An iron caldron of gigantic size, 
And underneath two fire-brands, dragon-wise 
Belching blue flame. " Is it with these you brew, 
Grandmother," asked the lad, " your magic stew ? " 
" With these, my sen. They're branches of wild vine 
No better logs for burning be than mine." 

" Well, call them branches if it be your taste ; 
But but I may not jest Haste, mother, haste !" 



THE WITCH 107 

Now, midway of the grotto, they descry 
A large, round table of red porphyry ; 
And, radiating from this wondrous place, 
Lower than root of oak or mountain base, 

Infinite aisles whose gleaming columns cluster 
Like pendant icicles in shape and lustre. 
These are the far-famed galleries of the fays, 
Here evermore a hazy brightness plays, 
Temples and shining palaces are here, 
Majestic porticoes their fronts uprear, 

And many a labyrinth and peristyle 

The like whereof was never seen erewhile, 

Even in Corinth or in Babylon. 

Yet let a fairy breathe, and these are gone ! 

And here, like nickering rays of light, disperse 

Through he dim walks of this serene Chartreuse, 

The fairies with their knights long since enchanted. 
Peace to the aisles by their fair presence haunted ! 
And now the witch was ready. First of all, 
She lifted high her hands, then let them fall, 
While Vincen had like holy Lawrence lain 
Upon the porphyry table, mute with pain. 

And mightily the spirit of the crone 
Appeared to work within her ; and as grown 
She seemed, when, rising to her height anew, 
She plunged her ladle in the boiling stew 
That overflowed the caldron in the heat, 
While all the cats arose and ringed her feet, 

And, with her left hand, unto Vincen's breast 
Applied the scalding drops with solemn zest, 
Gazing intently on him where he lay, 
Until the cruel hurt was charmed away ; 
And all the while, " The Lord is born, is dead, 
Is risen, shall rise again," she murmured. 



io8 MIREIO. 

Last on the quivering flesh the cross she made 
Thrice with her toe-nail ; as in forest glade 
A tigress fiercely claws her fallen prey. 
And now her speech maketh tumultuous way 
To where the dim gates of the future are. 
" Yea, he shall rise ! I see him now afar 

" Amid the stones and thistles of the hill, 
His forehead bleeding heavily. And still 
Over the stones and briers he makes his way, 
Bowed by his cross. Where is Veronica 
To wipe the blood ? And him of Cyrene 
To stay him when he fainteth, where is he? 

"And where the weeping Maries, hair dishevelled ? 
All gone ! And rich and poor, before him levelled, 
Gaze while he mounts ; and ' Who is this,' one saith, 
' Who climbs with shouldered beam, and never stayeth ? ' 
O carnal sons of men ! The Cross-bearer 
Is unto you but as a beaten cur. 

" O cruel Jews ! Wherefore so fiercely bite you 

The hands that feed, and lick the hands that smite you ? 

Receive the fruit of your foul deeds you must. 

Your precious gems shall crumble into dust, 

And that you deemed fair pulse or wholesome wheat 

Shall turn to ashes even while you eat, 

" And scare your very hunger. Woe is me 1 
Rivers that foam o'er carrion-heaps I see, 
And swords and lances in tumultuous motion. 
Peace to thy stormy waves, thou vexed Ocean ! 
Shall Peter's ancient bark withstand the shock ? 
Alas, it strikes upon the senseless rock ! 

" Nay, but there cometh One with power to save ! 
Fisher of men, he quells the rebel wave. 



THE WITCH. 109 

A fair new bark the Rhone is entering now : 
She hath God's cross uplifted on her prow, 
Rainbow divine ! Eternal clemency ! 
Another land, another sun, I see ! 

" Dance olive-pickers, where the fruit is shining ; 
Drink reapers, on the barley-sheaves reclining ! 
Revealed by signs so many, God," she said, 
" Is in his holy temple worshipped." 
And, stretching forth her hand, the witch of Baux 
Pointed the way and bade the children go. 

Light gleamed afar. They haste the ray to follow ; 
They thread their way to the Cordovan Hollow, 
Where sun and air await them, and they seem 
To see Mont Majour's wrecks, as in a dream, 
Strewn o'er the hill ; yet on the sunlit verge 
Pause for one kiss or ever they emerge. 



CANTO VII. 
The Old Men. 

FIXING a troubled eye on the old man, 
Vincen to Master Ambroi thus began, 
The while a mighty wind, the poplars bending, 
Its howl unto the poor lad's voice was lending : 
" I am mad, father, as I oft of late 
Have said. Thinkest thou I'm jesting when I say't ? 

Before his nut -shell cot the Rhone beside 
Sat Ambroi on a fallen trunk, and plied 
His trade. And, as he peeled the osier withe, 
Vincen received it, and, with fingers lithe 
And strong, bent the white rods to basket form, 
Sitting upon the door-stone. With the storm 

Of wind was the Rhone's bosom agitated, 
The waves drove seaward like a herd belated ; 
But round about the hut an azure mere 
Spread tranquilly. The billows brake not here : 
A pleasant shelter gave the willow-trees, 
And beavers gnawed their bitter bark in peace. 

While yonder, through the deep of limpid water, 
Darted at intervals the dark brown otter, 
Following the silver-flashing fish. Among ' 
The reeds and willows, pendulines had hung 
Their tiny nests, white woven with the wool 
Plucked from the poplar when its flowers are full. 



THE OLD MEN. in 

And here the small things fluttered full of glee, 
Or swang on wind-rocked stems right lazily. 
Here, too, a sprightly lassie, golden-haired, 
Head like a crown-cake ! back and forward fared, 
And spread on a fig-tree a fishing-net 
Unwieldy and with water dripping yet. 

Birds, beavers, otters, feared the maid no more 
Than whispering reeds or willows of the shore. 
This was the daughter of the basket-weaver, 
The little Vinceneto. No one ever 
Had even bored her ears, poor child ! yet so 
Her eyes were damson-blue, her bosom low, 

A caper-blossom by the river-side, 

Wooed by the splashing of the amorous tide. 

But now old Ambroi, with his long white beard 

Flowing o'er all his breast, his head upreared, 

And answered Vincen's outcry : " What is't ? Mad ? 

You are a blockhead ! that is all, my lad ! " 

" Ah ! " said the other, " for the ass to stray, 
Sweet must the mead be. But what do I say ? 
Thou knowest her ! If she to Aries should fare, 
All other maids would hide them in despair ; 
For, after her, I think the mould was broken. 
And what say to the words herself hath spoken, 

" ' You I will have ! ' " "Why, naught, poor fool ! say I : 

Let poverty and riches make reply ! " 

" O father ! " Vincen cried, "go, I implore thee, 

To Lotus Farm, and tell them all the story ! 

Tell them to look for virtue, not for gain ! 

Tell them that I can plough a stony plain, 

" Or harrow, or prune vines with any man ! 
Tell them their six yoke, with my guiding, can 



112 MlRfclO. 

Plough double ! Tell them I revere the old ; 

And, if they part us for the sake of gold, 

We shall both die, and they may bury us ! " 

" Oh, fie ! But you are young who maunder thus, 

Quoth Master Ambroi. " All this talk I know. 
The white hen's egg, the chaffinch on the bough, 
You'll have the pretty bird this very minute ! 
Whistle, bring sugared cake, or die to win it ; 
Yet will the chaffinch never come, be sure, 
And perch upon your finger I You are poor ! " 

" Plague on my poverty ! " poor Vincen cried, 
Tearing his hair. " Is God who hath denied 
All that could make life worthy, is He just ? 
And wherefore are we poor ? And wherefore must 
We still the refuse of the vineyard gather, 
While others pluck the purple clusters rather ? " 

Lifting his hands, the old man sternly said, 

" Weave on, and drive this folly from your head 1 

Shall the corn-ears rebuke the reaper, pray ? 

Or silly worm to God the Father say, 

' Why am I not a star in heaven to shine ? ' 

Or shall the ox to be a drover pine, 

lc So to eat corn instead of straw ? Nay, nay ! 

Through good and ill we all must hold our way. 

The hand's five fingers were unequal made. 

Be you a lizard, as your Master bade, 

And dwell content upon your wall apart, 

And drink your sunbeam with a thankful heart ! " 

" I tell thee, father, I this maid adore 
More than my sister, than my Maker more ; 
And if I have her not, 'tis death, I say ! " 
Then to the rough stream Vincen fled away ; 
While little Vinceneto burst out weeping, 
Let fall her net, and near the weaver creeping, 



THE OLD MEN. 113 

11 O father ! ere thou drive my brother wild, 

Listen to me 1 " began the eager child : 

" For where I served the master had a daughter ; 

And had a labourer, too, who loved and sought her, 

Just as our Vincen loves Mireio. 

She was named Alis ; he, Sivestre : and so 

" He laboured like a wolf because he loved. 
Skilful and prompt, quiet and saving proved, 
And took such care, master slept tranquilly ; 
But once mark, father, how perverse men be! 
One morning master's wife, as it befell, 
O'erheard Sivestre his love to Alis tell. 

1 ' So when at dinner all the men were sitting, 

The master gave Sivestre a wrathful greeting. 

' Traitor 1 ' he cried, with his eyes all aglow, 

1 You are discovered ! Take your wage, and go ! ' 

We looked at one another in dismay, 

As the good servant rose, and went his way. 

" Thereafter, for three weeks, when we were working, 
We used to see him round the farmstead lurking, 
A sorry sight ; for all his clothes were torn, 
And his face very pale and wild and worn. 
And oft at eve he to the trellis came, 
And called the little mistress by her name. 

" Erelong the hay-rick at its corners four 

Burnt all a-flame. And, father, something more ! 

They drew a drowned man out of the well." 

Then Ambroi, in gruff tones half-audible, 

"A little child a little trouble gives, 

And more and more for every year he lives. " 

Therewith put his long spatterdashes on 
Which he himself had made in days bygone, 



ii4 MiRfcio. 

His hobnailed shoes, and long red cap, and so 
Straightway set forth upon the road to Crau. 
'Twas harvest-time, the eve of St. John's day, 
The hedgerow paths were crowded all the way 

With troops of dusty, sunburnt mountaineers 
Hired for the reaping of the golden ears. 
In fig-wood quivers were their sickles borne, 
Slung to a belt across the shoulder worn. 
By twos and twos they came, and every pair 
Had its own sheaf-binder. And carts were there, 

Bearing the weary elders, and beside 

The pipes and tambourines with ribbons tied. 

Anon by fields of beardless wheat they passed, 

Lashed into billows by the noisy blast ; 

And " Mon Dieu, but that is noble grain ! " 

They cried. " What tufts of ears ! There shall we gain 

" Right pleasant reaping ! The wind bows them over ; 

But see you not how quickly they recover ? 

Is all the wheat-crop of Provence thus cheering, 

Grandfather ? " asked a youth, old Ambroi nearing. 

" The red is backward still," he made reply ; 

" But, if this windy weather last, deem I 

" Sickles will fail us ere the work be done. 

How like three stars the Christmas candles shone ! 

That was a blessed sign of a good year ! " 

" Now, grandfather, may the good God thee hear, 

And in thy granary the same fulfil ! " 

So Ambroi and the reapers chatted still 

In friendly wise, under the willows wending ; 
For these as well to Lotus Farm were tending. 
It also chanced that Master Ramoun went 
That eve to hearken for the wheat's complaint 
Against the wind, wild waster of the grain ; 
And, as he strode over the yellow plain 



THE OLD MEN. 115 

From north to south, he heard the golden corn 

Murmuring, " See the ills that we have borne, 

Master, from this great gale. It spills our seed 

And blurs our bloom ! " " Put on your gloves of reed," 

Sang others, "else the ants will be more fleet, 

And rob us of our all but hardened wheat. 

" When will the sickles come ? " And Ramoun turned 

Toward the trees, and even then discerned 

The reapers rising in the distance dim ; 

Who, as they nearer drew, saluted him 

With waving sickles flashing in the sun. 

Then roared the master, "Welcome, every one ! 

" A very God-send ! " cried he, loud and long ; 
And soon the sheaf-binders about him throng, 
Saying, " Shake hands ! Why, Holy Cross, look here ! 
What heaps of sheaves, good master, will this year 
Cumber your treading-floor ! " " Mayhap," said he : 
" We cannot alway judge by what we see. 

" Till all is trod, the truth will not be known. 
I have known years that promised," he went on, 
" Eighty full bushels to the acre fairly, 
And yielded in their stead a dozen barely. 
Yet let us be content ! " And, with a smile, 
He shook their hands all round in friendly style, 

And gossiped with old Ambroi affably. 
So entered all the homestead path, and he 
Called out once more, " Come forth, Mireio mine : 
Prepare the chiccory and draw the wine ! " 
And she right lavishly the table spread ; 
While Ramoun first him seated at its head, 

And the rest in their order, for the lunch. 
Forthwith the labourers began to crunch 



Il6 MlREIO. 

Hard-crusted bread their sturdy teeth between, 
And hail the salad made of goats-beard green ; 
While fair as an oat-leaf the table shone, 
And in superb profusion heaped thereon 

Were odorous cheese, onions and garlic hot, 
Grilled egg-plant, fiery peppers, and what not, 
To sting the palate. Master Ramoun poured 
The wine, king in the field and at the board ; 
Raising his mighty flagon now and then, 
And calling for a bumper on the men. 

" To keep the sickles keen on stony ground, 
They must be often whetted, I have found." 
The reapers held their goblets, bidden so, 
And red and clear the wine began to flow. 
" Ay, whet the blades ! " the cheery master cries ; 
And furthermore gives order in this wue : 

" Now eat your fill, and all your strength restore. 

But go thereafter, as you used of yore, 

And branches in the copse-wood cut, and bring 

In fagots ; thus a great heap gathering. 

And when 'tis night, my lads, we'll do the rest ! 

For this the fete is of Saint John the blest, 

" Saint John the reaper, and the friend of God." 

So spake the lord of all these acres broad. 

The high and noble art of husbandry, 

The rule of men, none better knew than he, 

Or how to make a golden harvest grow 

From dark sods moistened by the toiler's brow. 

A grave and simple master of the soil, 
Whose frame was bending now with years and toil ; 
Yet oft, of old, when floors were full of wheat, 
Glowing with pride he had performed the feat, 
Before his youthful corps, upright to stand 
Bearing two pecks upon each horny hand, 



THE OLD MEN. 117 

He could the influence of the moon rehearse ; 

Tell when her look is friendly, when adverse ; 

When she will raise the sap, and when depress ; 

The coming weather from her halo guess, 

And from her silver-pale or fiery face. 

Clear signs to him were birds and keen March days, 

And mouldy bread and noisome August fogs, 
St. Clara's dawn, the rainbow-hued sun-dogs, 
Wet seasons, times of drought and frost and plenty. 
Full oft, in pleasant years, a-ploughing went he, 
With six fair, handsome beasts. And, verily, 
Myself have seen, and it was good to see, 

The soil part silently before the share, 

And its dark bosom to the sun lay bare : 

The comely mules, ne'er from the furrow breaking, 

Toiled on as though they care and thought were taking 

For what they did. With muzzles low they went, 

And arching necks like bows when these are bent, 

And hasted not, nor lagged. Followed along 
Eye on the mules, and on his lips a song 
The ploughman, with one handle only guiding. 
So, in the realm where we have seen presiding 
Our old friend Ramoun, flourished every thing, 
And he bare sceptre like a very king. 

Now says he grace, and lifts his eyes above, 

And signs the holy cross. The labourers move 

Away to make the bonfire ready. These 

Bring kindling ; those, the boughs of dark pine-trees ; 

And the old men alone at table staying, 

A silence fell. But Ambroi brake it, saying, 

" For counsel, Ramoun, am I come to thee ; 
For I am in a great perplexity 



n8 



Thou only canst resolve. Cure see I none. 
Thou knowest, Master, that I have a son 
Who has been passing good until this day, 
It were ingratitude aught else to say ; 

" But there are flaws even in precious stones, 
And tender lambs will have convulsions, 
And the still waters are perfidious ever : 
So my mad boy, thou wilt believe it never, 
He loves the daughter of a rich freeholder, 
And swears he will in his embrace enfold her ! 

" Ay, swears he will, the maniac 1 And his love 
And his despair my soul to terror move. 
I showed him all his folly, be thou sure, 
And how wealth gains, and poverty grows poor 
In this hard world. In vain ! He would but call, 
Cost what it may, tell thou her parents all, 

" ' Tell them to look for virtue, not for gain ! 
Tell them that I can plough a stony plain, 
Or harrow, or prune vines with any man ! 
Tell them their six yoke, with my guiding, can 
Plough double ! Tell them I revere the old ; 
And, if they part us for the sake of gold, 

" ' We shall both die, and need but burial.' 
Now, Master Ramoun, I have told thee all. 
Shall I, clad in my rags, for this maid sue, 
Or leave my son to die of sorrow? " " Whew ! " 
The other. " To such wind spread thou no sail ! 
Nor he, nor she, will perish of this ail. 

" So much, good friend, I say in utmost faith. 
Nor would I, Ambroi, fret myself to death 
If I were thou ; but, seeing him so mad, 
I would say plainly, ' Calm your mind, my lad 1 
For if you raise a tempest by your passions, 
I'll teach you with a cudgel better fashions ! ' 



THE OLD MEN. 119 

"If an ass, Ambroi, for more fodder bray, 
Throw him none down, but let thy bludgeon play. 
Provenfal families in days bygone 
Were healthy, brave, and evermore at one, 
And strong as plane-trees when a storm befell. 
They had their strifes, indeed, we know it well ; 

" But, when returned the holy Christmas eve, 

The grandsire all his children would receive 

At his own board, under a star-sown tent ; 

And ceased the voice of strife and all dissent, 

When, lifting hands that wrinkled were and trembled, 

He blessed the generations there assembled. 

" Moreover, he who is a father truly 
Will have his child yield him obedience duly : 
The flock that drives the shepherd, soon or late, 
Will meet a wolf and a disastrous fate. 
When we were young, had any son withstood 
His father, he, belike, had shed his blood 1 ' 

" Thou wilt kill me then, father ! It is I 
Whom Vincen worships thus despairingly ; 
And before God and our most holy Mother, 
I give my soul to him, and to no other ! " 
A deathlike hush followed Mireio's word. 
The wife of Ramoun was the first who stirred. 

Upspringing with clasped hands and utterance wild, 
" Your speech is an atrocious insult, child ! 
Your love's a thorn that long hath stung us deep. 
Alari, the owner of a thousand sheep, 
You sent away ; and keeper Veran too, 
Disgusted with your scorn, his suit withdrew ; 

" Also the wealthy herdsman, Ourrias, 
You treated as a dog and a scapegrace ! 



120 MiREIO. 

Tramp through the country with your beggar, then ! 
Herd with strange women and with outcast men 1 
And cook your pot with fortune-telling crones 
Under a bridge mayhap, upon three stones. 

" Go, gypsy, you are free ! " the mother said ; 
Nor stayed Ramoun her pitiless tirade, 
Though his eye like a taper burned. But now 
The lightning flashed under his shaggy brow, 
And his wrath brake, all barriers overbearing, 
Like swollen torrent down a mountain tearing. 

" Your mother's right ! " he said. " Go ! travel yonder, 
And take the tempest with you where you wander 1 
Nay, but you shall not ! Here you shall remain, 
Though I should bind you with an iron chain, 
Or hold like a rebellious jumart, look ! 
Dragged by the nostrils with an iron hook ! 

' ' Yea, though you pine with sickly melancholy, 
Till from your cheeks the roses perish wholly, 
Or fade as snow fades when the sun is hot 
On the hill-sides in spring, go shall you not ! ' 
And mark, Mireio ! Sure as the hearth's ashes 
Rest on that brick, and sure as the Rhone dashes 

" Above its banks when it is overfull, 

And sure as that's a lamp, and here I rule, 

You'll see him never more ! " The table leapt 

Beneath his fist. Mireio only wept. 

Her heavy tears like dew on smallage rain, 

Or grapes o'er ripe before a hurricane. 

" And who," resumed the old man, blind with rage, 

" Curse it ! I say, who, Ambroi, will engage 

Thou didst not with the younger ruffian plot 

This vile abduction, yonder in thy cot ? " 

Then Ambroi also sprang infuriate, 

" Good God ! " he cried, " we are of low estate ; 



THE OLD MEN. 121 

" But let me tell you that our hearts are high ! 
No shame, no stain, is honest poverty ! 
I've served my country forty years or more 
On shipboard, and I know the cannon's roar, 
So young that I could scarce a boat-hook swing 
When on my first cruise I went wandering. 

" I've seen Melinda's empire far away, 

And with Suffren have haunted India, 

And done my duty over all the world 

In the great wars, where'er our flag unfurled 

That southern chief who passed his conquering hand 

With one red sweep from Spain to Russian land, 

" And at whose drum-beat every clime was quaking 
Like aspen-tree before the tempest shaking ; 
Horrors of boarding, shipwreck's agonies, 
These have I known, and darker things than these, 
Days than the sea more bitter. Being poor, 
No bit of motherland might I secure. 

" Scorned of the rich, I might not dress the sward, 

But suffer forty years without reward. 

We ate dog's food, on the hoar-frost we lay : 

Weary of life, we rushed into the fray, 

And so upbore the glorious name of France. 

But no one holds it in remembrance ! " 

His caddis-cloak upon the ground he threw, 

And spake no more. " What great thing wilt thou do?" 

Asked Ramoun, and his tone was full of scorn. 

" I, too, have heard the cannon-thunder borne 

Along the valley of Toulon, have seen 

The bridge of Arcole stormed, and I have been 

" In Egypt when her sands were red with gore ; 
But we, like men, when those great wars were o'er, 
F 



122 MlRtlO. 

Returning, fiercely fell upon the soil, 
And dried our very marrow up with toil 
The day began long ere the eastern glow, 
The rising moon surprised us at the hoe. 

" They say the Earth is generous. It is true ! 
But, like a nut-tree, naught she gives to you 
Unless well-beaten. And if all were known, 
Each clod of landed ease thus hardly won, 
He who should number them would also know 
The sweat-drops that have fallen from my brow. 

" And must I, by Ste. Anne of Apt, be still ? 
Like satyr toil, of siftings eat my fill, 
That all the homestead may grow wealthy, and 
Myself before the world with honour stand, 
Yet go and give my daughter to a tramp, 
A vagabond, a straw-loft-sleeping scamp ? 

" God's thunder strike you and your dog ! Begone ! 

But I," the master said, " will keep my swan." 

These were his last rough words ; and steadily 

Ambroi arose, and his cloak lifted he, 

And only rested on his staff to say, 

" Adieu ! Mayst thou not regret this day ! 

" And may the good God and his angels guide 
The orange-laden bark across the tide ! " 
Then, as he passed into the falling night, 
From the branch-heap arose a ruddy light, 
And one long tongue of flame the wanderer sees, 
Curled like a horn by the careering breeze ; 

And round it reapers dancing blithesomely, 
With pulsing feet, and haughty heads and free 
Thrown back, and faces by the bonfire lit, 
Loud crackling as the night-wind fanneth it. 
The sound of coals that to the brazier fall 
Bknds with the fife-notes fine but musical, 



THE OLD MEN. 123 

And merry as the song of the hedge-sparrow. 
Ah, but it thrills the old Earth to her marrow 
"When thou dost visit her, beloved St. John I 
The sparks went whirling upward, and hummed on 
The tabor gravely and incessantly, 
Like the low surging of a tranquil sea. 

Then did the dusky troop their sickle wave, 
And three great leaps athwart the flame they gave, 
And cloves of odorous garlic from a string 
Upon the glowing embers they did fling, 
And holy herb and John's-wort bare anigh ; 
And these were purified and blessed thereby. 

Then "Hail, St. John ! " thrice rose a deafening shout ; 
And hills and plain, illumined round about, 
Sparkled as though the dark were showering stars. 
And sure the Saint, above the heaven's blue bars, 
The breath of all this incense doth inhale, 
Wafted aloft by the unconscious gale, 



CANTO VIII. 
La Crau. 

r I 'HE rage of the mighty lioness 
A Who shall restrain ? 
She came to her den, and she found it bare : 
A Moorish huntsman had entered there. 
The huntsman came, and the whelp is gone. 
Away through the canebrake they have flown, 
Galloping far at a headlong pace. 

To follow vain I 

She roars awhile in her deep despite, 
Then rises and courses, lank and light, 
Over the hills of Barbary. 
As a maid bereft of her love is she. 

Mireio lay upon her little bed, 

Clasping in both her hands her burning head. 

Dim was the chamber ; for the stars alone 

Saw the maid weep, and heard her piteous moan, 

" Help, Mother Mary, in my sore distress ! 

Oh, cruel fate ! Oh, father pitiless, 

" Who tread me underfoot ! Could you but see 

My heart's mad tumult, you would pity me 1 

You used to call me darling long ago, 

And now you bend me to the yoke as though 

I were a vicious colt that you were fain 

To break. Why does the sea not flood this plain ? 



LA CRAU. 125 

" I would the wealthy lands that make me weep 

Were hid for evermore in the great deep ! 

Ah, had I in a serpent's hole been born, 

Of some poor vagrant, I were less forlorn ! 

For then if any lad, my Vincen even, 

Had asked my hand, mayhap it had been given. 

" O Vincen, who so handsome are and true I 

If only they would let me go to you, 

I'd cling as clings the tender ivy-vine 

Unto the oak : I would not ever pine 

For food, but life in your caresses find, 

And drink at wayside pools with happy mind." 

So on her pallet the sweet maid lay sobbing, 

Fire in her heart and every vein a-throbbing, 

And all the happy time remembering 

Oh, calm and happy ! of her love's fair spring, 

Until a word in Vincen's very tone 

Comes to her memory. " 'Twas you, my own, 

" 'Twas you," she cried, " came one day to the farm, 

And said, ' If ever thou dost come to harm, 

If any lizard, wolf, or poisonous snake, 

Ever should wound thee with its fang, betake 

Thyself forthwith to the most holy Saints, 

Who cure all ills and hearken all complaints.' 

" And sure 1 am in trouble now," she said : 
" Therefore we'll go, and come back comforted." 
Then lightly from her white cot glided she, 
And straightway opened, with a shining key, 
The wardrobe where her own possessions lay : 
It was of walnut wood, and carven gay. 

Here were her childhood's little treasures all : 
Here sacredly she kept the coronal 



126 MIREIO. 

Worn at her first communion ; and thereby 
A faded sprig of lavender and dry, 
And a wax taper almost burned, as well, 
Once blessed, the distant thunder to dispel. 

A smart red petticoat she first prepares, 

Which she herself had quilted into squares, 

Of needlework a very masterpiece ; 

And round her slender waist she fastens this ; 

And over it another, finer one 

She draws ; and next doth a black bodice don, 

And fasten firmly with a pin of gold. 
On her white shoulders, her long hair unrolled, 
Curling, and loose like a dark garment, lay, 
Which, gathering up, she swiftly coils away 
Under a cap of fine, transparent lace ; 
Then decks the veiled tresses with all grace, 

Thrice with a ribbon blue encircling them, 

The fair young brow's Arlesian diadem. 

Lastly, she adds an apron to the rest, 

And folds a muslin kerchief o'er her breast. 

In her dire haste, alone, the child forgat 

The shallow-crowned, broad-brimmed Proven9al hat, 

That might have screened her from the mortal heat. 
But, so arrayed, crept forth on soundless feet 
Adown the wooden staircase, in her hand 
Her shoes, undid the heavy door-bar, and 
Her soul unto the watchful saints commended, 
As away like a wind of night she wended. 

It was the hour when constellations keep 

Their friendly watch o'er followers of the deep. 

The eye of St. John's eagle flashed afar, 

As it alighted on a burning star, 

One of the three where the evangelist 

Hath his alternate dwelling. Cloud nor mist 



LA CRAU. 127 

Defaced the dcrk serene of star-lit sky ; 
But the great chariot of souls went by 
On winged wheels along the heavenly road, 
Bearing away from earth its blessed load. 
Far up the shining steeps of Paradise, 
The circling hills behold it as it flies. 

Mireio hasted no less anxiously 

Than Magalouno in the days gone by, 

Who searched the wood with sad, inquiring glance 

For her lost lover, Peire of Provence, 

When cruel waves divorced him from her side, 

And left her lone and wretched. Soon espied 

The maid, upon the boundary of the lea, 

Folds where her sire's own shepherds could she see 

Already milking. Some the sheep compelled, 

Against the pen-side by the muzzle held, 

To suckle quietly their tawny lambs. 

Always arose the bleat of certain dams ; 

While other childless ones the shepherds guide 
Toward the milker. On a stone astride, 
Mute as the very night, sits he, and dim j 
While, pressed from swollen udders, a long stream 
Of warm fine milk into the pail goes leaping, 
The white froth high about its border creeping. 

The sheep-dogs all in tranquil slumber lay. 
The fine, large dogs as white as lilies they 
Stretched round the enclosure, muzzles deep in thyme. 
And peace was everywhere, and summer clime ; 
And o'er the balmy country, far and near, 
Brooded a heaven full of stars, and clear. 

So in the stillness doth Mireio dash 
Along the hurdles, like a lightning flash, 



128 MlREIO. 

Lifting a wailing cry that never varies, 

" Will none go with me to the holy Maries, 

Of all the shepherds?" They and the sheep hear it, 

And see the maiden flitting like a spirit, 

And huddle up, and bow their heads, as though 

Smit by a sudden gale. The farm-dogs know 

Her voice, but never stir her flight to stay. 

And now is she already far away, 

Threads the dwarf-oaks, and like a partridge rushes 

Over the holly and the camphyre bushes, 

Her feet scarce touching earth. And now she passes 
Curlews in flocks asleep amid the grasses 
Under the oaks, who, roused from slumber soft, 
Arise in haste, and wing their flight aloft 
Over the sad and barren plain ; and all 
Together " Cour'li ! cour'li ! cour'li ! " call, 

Until the Dawn, with her dew-glittering tresses, 
From mountain-top to level slow progresses, 
Sweetly saluted by the tufted lark, 
Soaring and singing o'er the caverns dark 
In the great hills, whose pinnacles each one 
Appear to sway before the rising sun. 

Then was revealed La Crau, the bare, the waste, 
The rough with stones, the ancient, and the vast, 
Whose proud old giants, if the tale be true, 
Once dreamed, poor fools, the Almighty to sulxlue 
With but a ladder and their shoulders brave ; 
Bat He them 'whelmed in a destroying wave. 

Already had the rebels dispossest 
The Mount of Victory of his tall crest, 
Lifted with lever from its place ; and sure 
They would have helped it high upon Ventour, 
As they had piled the rugged escarpment 
They from the Alpine range had earlier rent. 



LA CRAU. 129 

But God his hand extended o'er the plain : 
The north-west wind, thunder, and hurricane 
He loosed ; and these arose like eagles three 
From mountain clefts and caverns and the sea, 
Wrapped in thick fog, with fury terrible, 
And on the marble pile together fell. 

Then were the rude Colossi overthrown ; 
And a dense covering of pudding-stone 
Spread o'er La Crau, the desolate, the vast, 
The mute, the bare to every stormy blast ; 
Who wears the hideous garment to this day. 
Meanwhile Mireio farther speeds away 

From the home-lands, while the sun's ardent glare 

Makes visible all round the shimmering air ; 

And shrill cicalas, grilling in the grass, 

Beat madly evermore their tiny brass. 

Nor tree for shade was there, nor any beast : 

The many flocks, that in the winter feast. 

On the short, savoury grasses of the moor, 

Had climbed the Alps, where airs are cool and pure, 

And pastures fadeless. Yet the maid doth fly 

Under the pouring fire of a June sky, 

Fly, fly, like lightning. Lizards large and gray 

Peep from their holes, and to each other say, 

" She must be mad who thus the shingle clears, 
Under a heat that sets the junipers 
A-dancing on the hills ; on Crau, the sands." 
The praying mantes lift beseeching hands, 
" Return, return, O pilgrim ! " murmuring, 
" For God hath opened many a crystal spring ; 

" And shady trees hath planted, so the rose 
To save upon your cheeks. Why, then, expose 
F* 



130 MlREIO. 

Your brow to the unpitying summer heat 
Vainly as well the butterflies entreat. 
For her the wings of love, the wind of faith, 
Bear on together, as the tempest's breath 

White gulls astray over the briny plains 

Of Agui-Morto. Utter sadness reigns 

In scattered sheep-cots of their tenants left, 

And overrun with salicorne. Bereft 

In the hot desert, seemed the maid to wake, 

And see nor spring nor pool her thirst to slake, 

And slightly shuddered. " Great St. Gent ! " she cried, 

" O hermit of the Bausset mountain-side ! 

O fair young labourer, who to thy plough 

Didst harness the fierce mountain-wolf ere now, 

And in the flinty rock, recluse divine, 

Didst open springs of water and of wine, 

' ' And so revive thy mother, perishing 
Of heat ! like me, when they were slumbering, 
Thou didst forsake thy household, and didst fare 
Alone with God through mountain-passes, where 
Thy mother found thee ! For me, too, dear Saint, 
Open a spring ; for I am very faint, 

" And my feet by the hot stones blistered ! " 
Then, in high heaven, heard what Mireio said 
The good St. Gent : and soon she doth discover 
A well far off, with a bright stone laid over ; 
And, like a marten through a shower of rain, 
Speeds through the flaming sun-rays, this to gain. 

The well was old, with ivy overrun 

A watering-place for flocks ; and from the sun 

Scarce by it sheltered sat a little boy, 

With basket-full of small white snails for toy. 

With his brown hands, he one by one withdrew them, 

The tiny harvest-snails ; and then sang to them, 



LA CRAU. 131 

" Snaily, snaily, little nun, 
Come out of the cell, come into the sun ! 
Show me your horns without delay, 
Or I'll tear your convent-walls away." 

Then the fair maid of Crau, when she had dipped 
Her burning lips into the pail, and sipped, 
Quickly upraised a lovely, rosy face, 
And, " Little one ! what dost thou here?" she says. 
A pause. " Pick snailies from the stones and grass ? " 
" Thou hast guessed right ! " the urchin's answer was. 

" Here in my basket have I see, how many ! 

Nuns, harvest -snails, and these, as good as any ! " 

" And thou dost eat them " " Nay, not I," replied he ; 

1 ' But mother carries them to Aries on Friday, 

And sells them ; and brings back nice, tender bread. 

Thou wilt have been to Aries?" " Never ! " she said. 

"What, never been to Aries ! But I've been there ! 
Ah, poor young lady ! Couldst thou see how fair 
And large a city that same Aries is grown ! 
She covers all the seven mouths of the Rhone. 
Upon the islands of the great salt-mere 
Her cattle graze : wild horses doth she rear. 

" And in one summer, corn enough doth grow, 
To feed her seven full years, if need were so. 
She's fishermen who fish on every sea, 
Seamen who front the storms right valiantly 
Of distant waters." Thus with pretty pride 
The boy his sunny country glorified, 

In golden speech ; hejr blue and heaving ocean ; 
Her Mont Majour, that keeps the mills in motion, 
These with soft olives ever feeding fully ; 
Her bitterns in the marshes booming dully. 
One thing alone, thou lovely, dusky town, 
The child forgat, of all thy charms the crown : 



132 Mmfcio. 

He said not, fruitful Aries, that thy fine air 

Gives to thy daughters beauty rich and rare, 

As grapes to autumn, or as wings to bird, 

Or fragrance to the hill-sides. Him had heard 

The country maiden, sadly, absently. 

But now, " Bright boy, wilt thou not go with me ? " 

She said ; " for, ere the frogs croak in the willow, 

My foot must planted be beyond the billow. 

Come with me ! I must o'er the Rhone be rowed, 

And left there in the keeping of my God ! " 

" Now, then," the urchin cried, " thou poor, dear lady, 

Thou art in luck ! for we are fishers," said he ; 

" And thou shalt sleep under our tent this night, 
Pitched in the shadow of the poplars white, 
So keeping all thy pretty clothing on ; 
And father, with the earliest ray of dawn, 
In our own little boat will put thee o'er ! " 
But she, " Do not detain me, I implore : 

" I am yet strong enough this night to wander." 
" Now God forbid ! " was the lad's prompt rejoinder : 
" Wouldst thou see, then, the crowd of sorry shapes 
From the Trau-de-la-Capo that escapes? 
For if they meet thee, be thou sure of this, 
They'll drag thee with them into the abyss ! " 

"Trau-de-la-Capo ! What may that be, pray ?" 

" I'll tell thee, lady, as we pick our way 

Over the stones." And forthwith he began : 

" Once was a treading-floor that overran 

With wealth of sheaves. To-morrow, on thy ways, 

Thou'lt pass, upon the riverside, the place. 

' Trod by a circle of Camargan steeds, 
The tall sheaves have been yielding up their seeds 



LA CRAU. 133 

To the incessant hoofs, a month or more. 
No pause, no rest ; and, on the treading-floor, 
Dusty and winding, still the eye perceives 
A very mountain of untrodden sheaves. 

" Also, the weather was so fiercely hot, 

The floor would burn like fire ; and rested not 

The wooden forks that more sheaves yet supplied 

While at the horses' muzzles there were shied 

Clusters of bearded ears unceasingly, 

They flew as arrows from the cross-bow fly. 

" And on St. Peter's day and on St. Charles' 
Rang, and rang vainly, all the bells of Aries : 
There was no Sunday and no holiday 
For the unhappy horses : but alway 
The heavy tramp around the weary road, 
Alway the pricking of the keeper's goad, 

" Alway the orders issued huskily, 

As in the fiery whirlwind still stood he. 

The greedy master of the treaders white 

Had even muzzled them, in his despite. 

And, when Our Lady's day in August came, 

The coupled beasts were treading, all the same, 

" The piled sheaves, foam-drenched. Their livers clung 
Fast to their ribs, and their jaws drivelling hung, 
When suddenly an icy, northern gale 
Smit, swept the floor, and God's blasphemers pale. 
It quakes ! It parts ! On a black caldron's brink 
Now stand they, and their eyes with horror sink. 

" Then the sheaves whirl with fury terrible. 
Pitch-forkers, keepers, keepers-aids as well, 
Struggle to save them ; but they naught can do : 
The van, the van-goats, and the mill-stones too, 
Horses and drivers, treading-floor, and master 
Are swallowed up in one immense disaster 1 " 



134 MIREIO. 

" You make me shudder ! " poor Mireio said. 
" Ah, but that is not all, my pretty maid 1 
Thou thinkest me a little mad, may be : 
But on the morrow thou the spot wilt see ; 
And carp and tench in the blue water playing, 
And, in the reeds, marsh-blackbirds roundelaying. 

" But on Our Lady's day, when mounts again 

The fire-crowned sun to the meridian, 

Lay thee down softly, ear to earth," said he, 

" And eye a-watch, and presently thou'lt see 

The gulf, at first so limpid, will begin 

To darken with the shadow of the sin ; 

" And slowly up from the unquiet deep 

A murmuring sound, like buzzing flies, will creep ; 

And then a tinkling, as of tiny bells, 

That soon into an awful uproar swells 

Among the water-weeds ! Like human voices 

Inside an amphora the fearsome noise is ! 

" And then it is the trot of wasted horses 
Painfully tramping round their weary courses 
Upon a hard, dry surface, evermore 
Echoing like a summer threshing-floor, 
Whom drives a brutal keeper, nothing loth, 
And hurries them with insult and with oath. 

" But, when the holy sun is sinking low, 
The blasphemies turn hoarse and fainter grow, 
The tinkling dies among the weeds. Far off, 
The limping, sorry steed is heard to cough ; 
And, on the top of the tall reeds a-swinging, 
Once more the blackbirds begin sweetly singing." 

So, full of chat, and with his basket laden, 
Travelled the little man before the maiden ; 



LA CRAU. 135 

While the descending sun with rose invests 
The great blue ramparts and the golden crests 
Of the hill-range, peaceful and pure and high, 
Blending its outline with the evening sky. 

Seemed the great orb, as he withdrew in splendour, 
God's peace unto the marshes to surrender, 
And to the great lake, and the olives gray 
Of the Vaulungo, and the Rhone away 
There in the distance, and the reapers weary, 
Who now unbend, and quaff the sea-air, cheery. 

Till the boy cries that far away he sees 

The home-tent's canvas fluttering in the breeze* 

"And the white poplar, dear maid, seest thou? 

And brother Not, who climbs it even now? 

He's there after cicalas, be thou sure ; 

Or to spy me returning o'er the moor. 

" Ah, now he sees us ! And my sister Zeto, 

Who helped him with her shoulder, turns this way too ; 

And seems to tell my mother that she may 

Put on the bouillabaise without delay. 

And mother also, I can see her leaning 

Over the boat, and the fresh fish a-gleaning." 

Then, as the two made haste with one accord 

To mount the dike, the lusty fisher roared, 

" Now this is charming ! Look this way, my wife ! 

Our little Andreloun, upon my life, 

Will be the prince of fishers one day," said he ; 

" For he has caught the queen of eels already ! " 



CANTO IX. 

The Muster. 

ALL sorrowfully droop the lotus-trees ; 
And heart-sick to their hives withdraw the bees, 
Forgetful of the heath with savoury sweet, 
And with milk-thistle. Water-lilies greet 
Kingfishers blue that to the vivary hie, 
And " Have you seen Mireio?" is their cry. 

While Ramoun and his wife by the fireside 
Are sitting, lost in grief, and swollen-eyed, 
And at their hearts the bitterness of death. 
" Doubtless," they said, " her reason wandereth. 
Oh, what a mad and wretched maid it is ! 
Oh, what a heavy, cruel downfall this ! 

" Oh, dire disgrace ! Our beauty and our hope 
So with the last of trampers to elope ! 
Fled with a gypsy ! And who shall discover 
The secret hole of this kidnapping lover, 
Where he the shameless one concealed hath ? " 
And, as they spake, they knit their brows in wrath. 

Now came the cupbearer with ass and pannier, 

And from the threshold, in his wonted manner, 

" Good-morrow," Jane. "I'm come," he said, " to seek 

The labourer's lunch." And Ramoun could but wreak 

His anguish on him. " Go, you cursed churl ! 

I'm as a cork-tree barked, without my girl ! " 



THE MUSTER. 137 

" Yet hark ye, cupbearer, upon your track 
Across the fields like lightning go you back, 
And bid the ploughmen and the mowers all 
Quit ploughs and scythes, the harvesters let fall 
Their sickles, and their shepherds too," said he, 
" Forsake their flocks, and instant come to me ! " 

Then, fleeter than a goat, the faithful man 
O'er stony fallow and red clover ran, 
Threaded holm-oaks on long declivities, 
Leaped o'er the roads along the base of these, 
And now already scents the sweet perfume 
Of new-mown hay, and the blue-tufted bloom 

Of tall lucerne descries ; and presently 

The measured sweep of the long scythes hears he, 

And lusty mowers bending in a row 

Beholds, and grass by the keen steel laid low 

In verdant swaths, ever a pleasant sight, 

And children, and young maidens, with delight 

Raking the hay and in cocks piling it ; 
While crickets, that before the mowers flit, 
Hark to their singing. Also, farther on, 
An ash-wood cart, by two white oxen drawn, 
Where a deft cartman, piles the well-cured grass 
By armfuls high and higher, till the mass 

Rises about his loins, and so conceals 

The rails, the cart-beam, and the very wheels ; 

And, when the cart moves on, with the hay trailing, 

It seems like some unwieldy vessel sailing. 

But now the cartman rises, and descries 

The runner, and " Hold, men ! there's trouble ! " cries ; 

And all his aids, who in great forkfuls carry 
To him the hay, do for a moment tarry, 



138 MiRfcio. 

And wipe their streaming brows ; and mowers rest 
The scythe-back carefully upon the breast, 
And whet the edge, as they the plain explore 
That Phoebus wings his burning arrows o'er. 

Began the rustic messenger straightway, 
" Hear men, what our good master bade me say : 
" ' Cupbearer,' was his word, ' upon your track 
Across the fields like lightning go you back, 
And bid the ploughmen and the mowers all 
Quit ploughs and scythes, the harvesters let fall 

" ' Their sickles, and the shepherds hastily 
Forsake their flocks, and hither come to me ! ' " 
Then, fleeter than a goat, the faithful man 
O'er the rich, madder-growing hillocks ran, 
Althen's bequest, and saw on every hand 
The gold of perfect ripeness tinge the land, 

And centaury-starred fields, and ploughmen bent 
Above their ploughs and on their mules intent, 
And earth, awakened from her winter-sleep, 
And shapeless clods upturned from furrows deep, 
And wagtails frisking o'er ; and yet again, 
" Hearken to what our master saith, good men ! 

" ' Cupbearer,' was his word, ' upon your track 
Across the fields like lightning go you back, 
And bid the ploughmen and the mowers all 
Quit ploughs and scythes, the harvesters let fall 
Their sickles, and the shepherds hastily 
Forsake their flocks, and hither come to me ! ' " 

Then the stout runner, fleeter than the goats, 
Dashed through the pieces waving with wild-oats, 
Fosses o'erleaped with meadow-flowers bright, 
And in great yellow wheat-fields passed from sight, 
Where reapers forty, sickle each in hand, 
Like a devouring fire fall on the land, 



THE MUSTER. 139 

And strip her mantle rich and odorous 
From off her breast, and, ever gaining thus 
As wolves upon their prey, rob, hour by hour, 
Earth of her gold, and summer of her flower ; 
While in the wake of each, in ordered line, 
Falls the loose grain, like tendrils of the vine. 

And the sheaf-binders, ever on the watch, 
The dropping wheat in handfuls deftly catch, 
And underneath the arm the same bestow 
Until, so gathering, they have enow ; 
When, pressing with the knee, they tightly bind, 
And lastly fling the perfect sheaf behind. 

Twinkle the sickles keen like swarming bees, 
Or laughing ripple upon sunny seas 
Where flounders are at play. Erect and tall, 
With rough beards blent, in heaps pyramidal, 
The sheaves by hundreds rise. The plain afar 
Shows like a tented camp in days of war ; 

Even like that which once arose upon 

Our own Beaucaire, in days how long withdrawn ! 

When came a host of terrible invaders, 

The great Simon, and all the French crusaders, 

Led by a legate, and in fierce advance 

Count Raymond slaughtered and laid waste Provence. 

And here, with gleanings falling from her fingers, 
Full many a merry gleaner strays and lingers ; 
Or in the warm lea of the stacks of corn, 
Or 'mid the canes, drops languidly, o'erborne 
By some long look, that e'en bewilders her, 
Because Love also is a harvester. 

And yet again the master's word, " Go back 
Like lightning, cupbearer, upon your track, 



140 

And bid the ploughmen and the mowers all 
Quit ploughs and scythes, the harvesters let fall 
Their sickles, and the shepherds instantly 
Forsake their flocks, and hither come to me ! " 

Then fleeter than a goat sped on his way 
The faithful soul, straight through the olives gray, 
On, on, like a north-eastern gale descending 
Upon the vineyards, and the branches rending, 
Until, away in Crau, the waste, the lonely, 
Behold him, where the partridge whirreth only ; 

And, still remote, discovers he the flocks 
Tranquilly lying under the dwarf-oaks, 
And the chief-shepherd, with his helpers young, 
For noon-tide rest about the heather flung, 
And little wagtails hopping at their ease 
O'er sheep that ruminate unmoved by these. 

And slowly, slowly sailing o'er the sea 

Diaphanous vapours, light and white, sees he, 

And deems that up in heaven some fair saint, 

Gliding too near the sun, is stricken faint 

On the aerial heights, and hath let fall 

Her convent-veil. And still the herald's call : 

" Hark, shepherds, to the master's word, ' Go back 
Like lightning, cupbearer, upon your track, 
And bid the ploughmen and the mowers all 
Quit ploughs and scythes, the reapers too let fall 
Their sickles, and the shepherds instantly 
Forsake their flocks, and hither come to me ! " 

Then the scythes rested and the ploughs were stayed, 

The forty highland reapers each his blade 

Let fall, and rushed as bees on new-found wings 

Forsake the hive, begin their wanderings, 

And, by the din of clanging cymbals led, 

Gather them to a pine. So also fled 



THE MUSTER. 141 

The labourers one and all ; the waggoners, 
And they who tended them ; the rick -builders, 
Gleaners, and shepherds, and of sheaves the heapers, 
Binders of sheaves, rakers, mowers, and reapers, 
Mustered them at the homestead. There, heart-sore 
And silent, on the grass-grown treading-floor, 

The master and his wife sat down to bide 
The coming of the hands ; who, as they hied 
Thither, much marvelled at the strange behest 
So calling them from toil, and who addrest 
These words unto old Ramoun, drawing near : 
" Thou sentest for us, master. We are here." 

Then Ramoun raised his head, and thus replied : 

" The great storm alway comes at harvest-tide. 

However well-advised, as we advance 

We must, poor souls, all stumble on mischance : 

I cannot say it plainer. Friends, I pray, 

Let each tell what he knows, without delay ! " 

Lauren de Gout came forward first. Now he 
Had failed no single year since infancy 
His quivered sickle from the hills to bring 
Down into Aries when ears were yellowing. 
Brown as a church-stone, he, with weather-stain, 
Or ancient rock the sea-waves charge in vain. 

The sun might scorch, the north-west wind might roar, 

But this old king of reapers evermore 

Was first at work. And now with him there came 

Seven rough and stalwart boys who bore his name. 

Him with one voice the harvesters did make 

Their chief, and justly : therefore thus he spake : 

"If it be true that, when the dawning sky 
Is ruddy, there is rain or snow close by, 



142 MlREIO. 

Then what I saw this very morn, my master, 
Presageth surely sorrow and disaster. 
So may God stay the earthquake ! But as night 
Fled westward, followed by the early light, 

" And wet with dew as ever, I the men 
First summoned briskly to their toil again, 
And then myself, my sleeves uprolling gayly, 
Bent me to mine own task, as I do daily ; 
But at the first stroke wounded thus my hand, 
A thing which hath not happened, understand, 

" For thirty years." His fingers then he showed, 
And the deep gash, wherefrom the blood yet flowed. 
Then groaned, more piteously than before, 
Mireio's parents ; while a lusty mower, 
One Jan Bouquet, a knight of La Tarasque 
From Tarascon, a hearing rose to ask. 

A rough lad he, yet kind and comely too. 

None with such grace in Condamino threw 

The pike and flag, and never merrier fellow 

Sang Lagadigadeu's ritournello 

About the gloomy streets of Tarascon, 

When, once a year, they ring with shout and song, 

And brighten up with dances and are blithe. 
He might have been a master of the scythe, 
Could he have held the straight, laborious path ; 
But, when the fate-days came, farewell the swath, 
And welcome revels underneath the trees, 
And orgies in the vaulted hostelries, 

And bull-baitings, and never-ending dances 1 

A very roisterer he who now advances, 

With, ' ' As we, master, in long sweeps were mowing, 

I hailed a nest of francolines, just showing 

Under a tuft of tares ; and, as I bent 

Over the pendent grass, with the intent 



THE MUSTER. 143 

11 To count the fluttering things, what do I see 

But horrible red ants oh, misery ! 

In full possession of the nest and young ! 

Three were then dead. The rest, with vermin stung, 

Their little heads out of the nest extended, 

As though, poor things, they cried to be defended ; 

" But a great cloud of ants, more venemous 
Than nettles, greedy, eager, furious, 
Them were o'erwhelming even then ; and I, 
Leaning upon my scythe right pensively, 
Could hear, far off, the mother agonize 
Over their cruel fate, with piteous cries." 

This tale of woe, following upon the other, 
Is a lance-thrust to father and to mother : 
The worst foreboding seemeth justified. 
Then, as a tempest in the hot June-tide, 
Gathering silently, ascends the air, 
The weather darkening ever, till the glare 

Of lightning shows in the north-east, and loud 
Peal follows peal, another left the crowd, 
One Lou Marran. It was a name renowned 
In all the farms when winter-eves came round, 
And labourers, chatting while the mules were stalled 
And pulling lucerne from the rack, recalled 

What things befell when first this man was hired, 
Until the lights for lack of oil expired. 
Seed-time it was, and every other man 
Was opening up his furrow save Marran ; 
Who, hanging back, eyed coulter, tackle, share, 
As he the like had seen not anywhere. 

Till the chief-ploughman spake : " Here is a lout 
To plough for hire ! Why, a hog with his snout 



144 MIR&IO. 

I wager would work better ! " " I will take 
Thy bet," said Lou Marran ; " and be the stake 
Three golden louis ! Either thou or I, 
Master, that sura will forfeit presently." 

"Let blow the trumpet ! " Then the ploughmen twain 

In two unswerving lines upturn the plain, 

Making for the chosen goal, two poplars high. 

The sun-rays gild the ridges equally, 

And all the labourers call out, " Well done ! 

Thy furrow, chieftain, is a noble one ; 

" Yet, sooth to say, so straight the other is, 
One might an arrow shoot the length of this." 
And Lou Marran was winner, he who here 
Before the baffled council doth appear, 
All pale, his bitter evidence to bear : 
" Comrades, as I was whistling, at my share, 

" Not long ago, methought the land was rough, 
And we would stretch, the day to finish off ; 
When, lo ! my beasts with fear began to quake, 
Bristled their hairy sides, their ears lay back. 
They stopped ; and, with dazed eyes, I saw all round 
The field-herbs fade, and wither to the ground. 

" I touch my pair. Baiarclo sadly eyes 
His master, but stirs not. Falet applies 
His nostril to the furrow. Then I lash 
Their shins ; and, all in terror, off they dash, 
So that the ash-wood beam the beam, I say 
Is rent, and yoke and tackle borne away. 

" Then grew I pale, and all my breath was gone ; 

And, seized as with a strong convulsion, 

I ground my jaws. A dreadful shudder grew 

Upon me, and my hair upraised, I knew, 

As thistle-down is raised by the wind's breath ; 

But the wind sweeping over me was Death." 



THE MUSTER. 145 

" Mother of God ! " Mireio's mother cried 

In torture, " do thou in thy mantle hide 

Mine own sweet child ! " and on her knees she dropped 

With lifted eyes and parted lips : yet stopped 

Ere any word was spoken, for she saw 

Anteume, shepherd-chief and milker, draw 

Hurriedly toward them. " And why," he was panting, 

" Was she the junipers untimely haunting ? " 

Then, the ring entering, his tale he told. 

" This morn, as we were milking in the fold, 

So early that above the bare plain showed 

The sky yet hob-nailed with the stars of God, 

" A soul, a shadow, or a spectre swept 

Across the way. The dogs all silence kept, 

As if afraid, and the sheep huddled close. 

Thought I, who scarce have time, as master knows, 

Ever an Ave in the church to offer, 

' Speak, soul, if thou art blest. If not, go suffer ! ' 

" Then came a voice I knew, it never varies, 
' Will none go with me to the holy Maries, 
Of all the shepherds ? ' Ere the word was said, 
Afar over the plain the voice had fled. 
Wilt thou believe it, master ? it was she, 
Mireio ! " Cried the people, " Can it be ? " 

" It was herself 1 " the shepherd-chief replied : 
" I saw her in the star-light past me glide, 
Not, surely, as she was in other days, 
But lifting up a wan, affrighted face ; 
Whereby she was a living soul, I knew, 
And stung by some exquisite anguish too. " 

At this dread word, the labourers groan, and wring 
Each other's horny palms. " But who will bring," 
G 



146 MlREIO. 

The stricken mother began wildly shrieking, 
" Me to the saints ? My bird I must be seeking ! 
My partridge of the stony field," she said, 
" I must o'ertake, wherever she has fled. 

" And if the ants attack her, then these teeth 
Shall grind them and their hill ! If greedy Death 
Dare touch my darling rudely, then will I 
Break his old, rusty scythe, and she shall fly 
Away across the jungle ! " Crying thus, 
Jano Mario fled delirious 

Back to the home ; while Ramoun order gave, 
" Cartman, set up the cart-tilt, wet the nave, 
And oil the axle, and without delay 
Harness Moureto. We go far to-day, 
And it is late." The mother, in despair, 
Mounted the cart ; and more and more the air 

Resounded with the transports of her woe : 
" O pretty dear ! O wilderness of Crau ! 
O endless, briny plains ! O dreadful sun, 
Be kind, I pray you, to the fainting one ! 
But for her, the accursed witch Taven, 
Who lured my darling into her foul den, 

And poured before her, as I know right well, 

Her philters and her potions horrible, 

And made her drink, now may the demons all 

Who lured St. Anthony upon her fall, 

And drag her body o'er the rocks of Baux 1 " 

As the unhappy soul lamented so, 

Her tones were smothered by the cart's rude shaking ; 
And the farm-labourers, a last look taking 
To see if none were coming o'er the plain, 
Turned slowly, sadly, to their toil again ; 
While swarms of gnats, the idle, happy things, 
Filled the green walks with sound of humming wings. 



CANTO X. 

Camargue. 

\ ISTEN to me, good people of Provence, 

-L* Countrymen one and all, from Aries to Vence, 

From Vanensolo even to Marseilles, 

And, if the heat oppress you, come, I pray, 

To Durancolo banks, and, lying low, 

Hear the maid's tale, and weep the lover's woe ! 

The little boat, in Andreloun's control, 
Parted the water silent as a sole, 
The while the enamoured maiden whom I sing, 
Herself on the great Rhone adventuring, 
Beside the urchin sat, and scanned the wave 
Intently, with a dreamy eye and grave, 

Till the boy-boatman spake : " Now knewest thou ever, 
Young lady, how immense is the Rhone river ? 
Betwixt Camargue and Crau might holden be 
Right noble jousts ! That is Camargue ! " said he 5 
" That isle so vast it can discern, I deem, 
All the seven mouths of the Arlesian stream." 

The rose-lights of the morn were beauteous 

Upon the river, as he chatted thus. 

And the tartanes, with snowy sails outswelled, 

Tranquilly glided up the stream, impelled 

By the light breeze that blew from off the deep, 

As by a shepherdess her milk-white sheep. 



148 MlREIO. 

And all along the shore was noble shade 
By feathery ash and silver poplar made, 
Whose hoary trunks the river did reflect, 
And giant limbs with wild vines all bedeckt 
With ancient vines and tortuous, that upbore 
Their knotty, clustered fruit the waters o'er. 

Majestically calm, but wearily 

And as he fain would sleep, the Rhone passed by 

Like some great veteran dying. He recalls 

Music and feasting in Avignon's halls 

And castles, and profoundly sad is he 

To lose his name and waters in the sea. 

Meanwhile the enamoured maiden whom I sing 
Had leaped ashore ; and the boy, tarrying 
Only to say, " The road that lies before 
Is thine ! The Saints will guide thee to the door 
Of their great chapel," took his oars in hand, 
And swiftly turned his shallop from the land. 

Under the pouring fire of the June sky, 

Like lightning doth Mireio fly and fly. 

East, west, north, south, she seems to see extend 

One weary plain, savannas without end, 

With glimpses of the sea, and here and there 

Tamarisks lifting their light heads in air. 

Golden-herb, samphire, shave-grass, soda, these 
Alone grow on the bitter prairies, 
Where the black bulls in savage liberty 
Rejoice, where the white horses all are free 
To roam abroad and breast the briny gale, 
Or air surcharged with sea-fog to inhale. 

But now o'er all ths marsh, dazzling to view, 
Soars an immeasurable vault of blue, 



CAMARGUE. 149 

Intense, profound. The only living thing 
A solitary gull upon the wing 
Or hermit-bird whereof the shadow falls 
Over the desert meres at intervals, 

Or red-legged chevalier, or hern, wild-eyed 

With crest of three white plumes upraised in pride. 

But soon the sun so beats upon the plain 

That the poor, weary wanderer is fain 

To loose and lift her folded neckerchief, 

So from the burning heat to find relief. 

Yet grows the torment ever more and more ; 
The sun ascending higher than before, 
Till, as a starved lion's eye devours 
The Abyssinian desert that he scours, 
Yon lidless orb the very zenith gains 
And pours a flood of fire o'er all the plains. 

Now were it sweet beneath a beech to slumber ! 
Now, like a swarm of hornets without number, 
An angry swarm, fierce darting high and low, 
Or liks the hot sparks from a grindstone, grow 
The pitiless rays ; and Love's poor pilgrim, worn 
And gasping, and by weariness o'erborne, 

Forth from her bodice draws its golden pin, 
So that her panting bosom shows within. 
All dazzling white, like the campanulas 
That bloom beside the summer sea, it was, 
And, like twin-billows in a brooklet, full. 
Anon, the solitary scene and dull 

Loses a little of its sadness, and 

A lake shows on the limit of the land, 

A spacious lake, whose wavelets dance and shine, 

While shrnbs of golden-herb and jessamine 

On the dark shore appear to soar aloft 

Until they cast a shadow cool and soft. 



150 MlREIO. 

It seems to the poor maid a heavenly vision, 
A heartening glimpse into the land elysian. 
And soon, afar, by that blue wave she sees 
A town with circling walls and palaces, 
And fountains gay, and churches without end, 
And slender spires that to the sun ascend, 

And ships and lesser sailing-craft, sun-bright, 
Entering the port ; and the wind seemeth light. 
So that the oriflambs and streamers all 
Languidly round the masts arise and fall. 
" A miracle ! " the maiden thought, and now 
Wipes the abundant moisture from her brow, 

And, with new hope, toward the town doth fare, 
Deeming the Maries' tomb is surely there. 
Alas ! alas ! be her flight ne'er so speedy, 
A change will pass upon the scene. Already 
The sweet illusion seems to fade and flit ; 
Recedes the vision as she follows it. 

An airy show, the substance of a dream, 

By spirit woven out of a sunbeam, 

And all its fair hues borrowed from the sky, 

The filmy fabric wavers presently, 

And melts away, and like a mist is gone. 

Bewildered by the heat, and quite alone, 

Is left Mireio : yet her way she keeps, 
Toiling over the burning, yielding heaps 
Of sand ; over the salt-encrusted waste 
Seamed, swollen, dazzling to the eye doth haste. 
On through the tall marsh-grasses and the reeds 
And rushes, haunted by the gnat, she speeds, 

With Vincen ever in her thought. And soon, 
Skirting the lonesome Vacares lagune, 



CAMARGUE. 151 

She sees it loom at last in distance dim, 
She sees it grow on the horizon's rim, 
The Saints' white tower, across the billowy plain, 
Like vessel homeward bound upon the main. 

And, even at that blessed moment, one 

Of the hot shafts of the unpitying sun 

The ill-starred maiden's forehead pierced, and she 

Staggered, death-smitten, by the glassy sea, 

And dropped upon the sand. Weep, sons of Crau, 

The sweetest flower in all the land lies low. 

When, in a valley by the river-side, 

Young turtle-doves a huntsman hath espied, 

Some innocently drinking, others cooing, 

lie, through the copse- wood with his gun pursuing, 

At the most fair takes alway his first aim, 

The cruel sun had only done the same. 

Now, as she lay in swoon upon the shore, 

A swarm of busy gnats came hovering o'er, 

Who seeing the white breast and fluttering breath, 

And the poor maiden fainting to her death, 

With ne'er a friendly spray of juniper 

From all the pulsing fire to shelter her, 

Each one the viol of his tiny wings 

Imploring played with plaintive murmurings, 

" Get thee up quickly, quickly, damsel fair ! 

For aye malignant is this burning air," 

And stung the drooping head ; and sea-spray flew, 

Sprinkling the fevered face with bitter dew : 

Until at last Mireio rose again, 

And, with a feeble moan of mortal pain, 

" My head ! my head ! " she dragged her way forlorn 

And slow from salicorne to salicorne, 

Poor little one ! until her heavy feet 

Arrived before the seaside Saints' retreat. 



152 MlREIO. 

There, her sad eyes with tears all brimming o'er, 

Upon the cold flags of the chapel-floor, 

Wet with the infiltration of the sea, 

She sank, and clasped her brow in agony ; 

And on the pinions of the waiting air 

Was borne aloft Mireio's faltering prayer : 

" O holy Maries, who can cheer 

The sorrow-laden, 
Lend, I beseech, a pitying ear 
To one poor maiden ! 

" And when you see my cruel care 

And misery, 

Then look in mercy down the air, 
And side with me ! 

" I am so young, dear Saints above, 

And there's a youth 
My handsome Vincen whom I love 
With utter truth ! 

"I love him as the wayward stream 

Its wanderings ; 

As loves the new-fledged bird, I deem, 
To try its wings. 

"And now they tell me I must quench 

This fire eternal ; 

Must from the blossoming almond wrench 
Its flowers vernal. 

" O holy Maries, who can cheer 

The sorrow-laden, 
Lend, I beseech, a pitying ear 
To one poor maiden ! 

" Now am I come, dear Saints, from far, 

To sue for peace : 

Nor mother-prayer my way could bar, 
Nor wilderness ; 



CAMARGUE. 153 

" The sun, that cruel archer, shot 

Into my brain, 

Thorns, as it were, and nails red-hot, 
Sharp is the pain ; 

" Yet give me but my Vincen dear : 

Then will we duly, 

We two, with glad hearts worship here, 
Oh, I say truly ! 

" Then the dire pain will rend no more 

These brows of mine, 
And the face bathed in tears before 
Will smile and shine. 

" My sire mislikes our love ; is cold 

And cruel often : 

'Twere naught to you, fair Saints of gold, 
His heart to soften. 

" Howe'er so hard the olive grow, 

'Tis mollified 

By all the winds that alway blow 
At Advent-tide. 

"The medlar and the service-plum, 

So sharp to taste 

When gathered, strewn on straw become 
A pleasant feast. 

O holy Maries, who can cheer 

The sorrow-laden, 
Lend, I beseech, a pitying ear 

To one poor maiden ! 

" Oh, what can mean this dazzling light ? 

The church is riven 

O'erhead ; the vault with stars is bright. 
Can this be heaven ? 



154 MIREIO. 

" Oh, who so happy now as I ? 

The Saints, my God, 
The shining Saints, toward me fly, 
Down yon bright road ! 

O blessed patrons, are you there 

To help, to stay me ? 
Yet hide the dazzling crowns you wear, 

Or these will slay me. 

" Veil in a cloud the light appalling ! 

My eyes are heavy. 

Where is the chapel ? Are you calling ? 
O Saints, receive me ! " 

So, in a trance and past all earthly feeling, 

The stricken girl upon the pavement kneeling, 

With pleading hands, and head thrown backward, cried. 

Her large and lovely eyes were opened wide, 

As she beyond the veil of flesh discerned 

St. Peter's gates, and for the glory yearned. 

Mute were her lips now ; but her face yet shone, 

And wrapped in glorious contemplation 

She seemed. So, when the gold-red rays of dawn 

Early alight the poplar-tips upon, 

The flickering night-lamp turneth pale and wan 

In the dim chamber of a dying man. 

And, as at daybreak, also, flocks arouse 
From slumber and disperse, the sacred house 
Appeared to open, all its vaulted roof 
To part, and pillars tall to stand aloof, 
Before the three fair women, heavenly fair, 
Who on a starry path came down the air. 

White in the ether pure, and luminous, 
Came the three Maries out of heaven thus. 



CAMARGUE. 155 

One of them clasped an alabaster vase 

Close to her breast, and her celestial face 

In splendour had that star alone for peer 

That beams on shepherds when the nights are clear. 

The next came with a palm in her hand holden, 
And the wind lifting her long hair and golden. 
The third was young, and wound a mantle white 
About her sweet brown visage ; and the light 
Of her dark eyes, under their falling lashes, 
Was greater than a diamond's when it flashes. 

So, nearer to the mourner drew these three, 

And leaned above, and spake consolingly. 

And bright and tender were the smiles that wreathed 

Their lips, and soft the message that they breathed. 

They made the thorns of cruel martyrdom, 

That pierced Mireio, into flowers bloom. 



" Be of good cheer, thou poor Mireio ; 

For we are they men call the Saints of Baux, 

The Maries of Judaea : and we three 

Be of good cheer ! we watch the stormy sea, 

Whereby we succour many a craft distresst ; 

For the wild waves are still at our behest. 

" Look up along St. James s path in air ! 

A moment since we stood together there, 

At the celestial end thereof, remote, 

And, gazing through the clustered stars, took note 

How faithful souls to Campoustello throng 

To seek the dear Saint's tomb, and worship long. 

"And, with the tune of falling fountains blending, 
We heard the solemn litanies ascending 
From pilgrims gathered in the fields at even, 
And pealing of church-bells, and glory given 



156 MlREIO. 

Unto our son and nephew, by his names 
Of Spain's apostle and the greater James. 

" Then were we glad of all the pious vows 
Paid to his memory ; and, on the brows 
Of those poor pilgrims, dews of peace shed we, 
And their souls flooded with serenity ; 
When, suddenly, thy warm petition came, 
And seemed to smite us like a jet of flame. 

"Dear child, thy faith is great ; yet thy request 
Our pitying hearts right sorely hath opprest. 
For thou wouldst drink the waters of pure love, 
Or ever to its source thee Death remove, 
The bliss we have in God himself to share. 
Hast thou, then, seen contentment anywhere 

" On earth ? Is the rich blest, who softly lies, 

And in his haughty heart his God denies, 

And cares not for his fellow-man at all ? 

Thou knowest the leech when it is gorged will fall, 

And he before the judgment-seat must pass 

Of One who meekly rode upon an ass. 

" Is the young mother happy to impart 
Unto her baby, with a swelling heart, 
The first warm jet of milk ? One bitter drop, 
Mingled therewith, may poison all her hope. 
Now see her lean, distraught, the cradle over, 
And a fair little corse with kisses cover. 

" And hath she happiness, the promised bride, 
Wandering churchward by her lover's side ? 
Ah, no ! The path under those lingering feet 
Thornier shall prove, to those who travel it, 
Than sloe-bush of the moorland. Here below 
Are only trial sharp and weary woe. 



CAMARGUE. 157 

" And here below the purest waters ever 

Are bitter on the lips of the receiver ; 

The worm is born within the fruit ahvay ; 

And all things haste to ruin and decay. 

The orange thou hast chosen, out of all 

The basket's wealth, shall one day taste as gall. 

" And in thy world, Mireio, they who seem 
To breathe, sigh only. And should any dream 
Of drinking at the founts that run not dry, 
Anguish alone such bitter draught will buy. 
So must the stone be broken evermore, 
Ere thou extract the shining silver ore. 

" Happy is he who cares for others' woe, 
And toils for men, and wearies only so ; 
From his own shoulders tears their mantle warm, 
Therein to fold some pale and shivering form ; 
Is lowly with the lowly, and can waken 
Fire-light on cold hearths of the world-forsaken. 

" Hark to the sovereign word, of man forgot, 
' Death too is Life ; ' and happy is the lot 
Of the meek soul and simple, he who fares 
Quietly heavenward, wafted by soft airs ; 
And lily-white forsakes this low abode, 
Where men have stoned the very saints of God. 

" And if, Mireio, thou couldst see before thee, 

As we from empyrean heights of glory, 

This world ; and what a sad and foolish thing 

Is all its passion for the perishing, 

Its churchyard terrors, then, O lambkin sweet, 

Mayhap thou wouldst for death and pardon bleat ! 

" But, ere the wheat-ear hath its feathery birth, 
Ferments the grain within the darksome earth, 



158 MlREIO. 

Such ever is the law ; and even we, 

Before we wore our crowns of majesty, 

Drank bitter draughts. Therefore, thy soul to stay, 

We'll tell the pains and perils of our way." 

Paused for a moment, then, the holy three. 
The waves, being fain to listen, coaxingly 
Had flocked along the ocean sand ; the pines 
Unto the rustling water-weeds made signs ; 
And teal and gull beheld, with deep amaze, 
Peace on the restless heart of Vacares ; 

The sun and moon, afar the desert o'er, 
Bow their great crimson foreheads, and adore ; 
And all Camargue salt-sown, forsaken isle 
Seems thrilled with sacred expectation ; while 
The saints, to hearten for her mortal strife 
Love's martyr, tell the story of their life. 



CANTO XL 
The Saints. 

" T^HE cross was looming yet, Mireio, 

A Aloft on the Judsean mount of woe, 
Wet with the blood of God ; and all the time 
Seemed crying to the city of the crime, 
' What hast thou done, thou lost and slumbering 
What hast thou done, I say, with Bethlehem's King ? 

" The angry clamours of the streets were stayed : 
Cedron alone a low lamenting made 
Afar ; and Jordan rolled a gloomy tide, 
Hasting into the desert, there to hide 
The overflowings of his grief and rage 
'Mid terebinth and lentisk foliage. 

" And all the poorer folk were heavy-hearted, 
Knowing it was the Christ who had departed, 
First having opened his own prison-door, 
On friends and followers to look once more, 
The sacred keys unto St. Peter given, 
And, like an eagle, soared away to heaven. 

" Oh ! then in Jewry woe and weeping were 
For the fair Galilean carpenter, 
Him who His honeyed parables distilled 
Over their hearts, and fainting thousands filled 
Upon the hillsides with unleavened bread, 
And healed the leper and revived the dead. 



160 Mmiio. 

" But scribes and kings and priests, and all the horde 

Of sacrilegious vendors whom the Lord 

Had driven from his house, their hatred uttered, 

' And who the people will restrain,' they muttered, 

' Unless in all the region round about 

The glory of this cross be soon put out ? ' 

" So raged they, and the martyrs testified : 
Stephen the first was stoned until he died, 
James with the sword was slain, and many a one 
Cruelly crushed beneath a weight of stone. 
Yet, dying, all bear record undismayed : 
' Christ Jesus is the Son of God ! ' they said. 

" Then us, brothers and sisters of the slain, 
Who him had followed in a loving train, 
They thrust into a crazy bark ; and we, 
Oarless and sailless, drifted out to sea. 
We women sorely wept, the men their eyes 
Anxiously lifted to the lowering skies. 

" Palaces, temples, olive-trees, we saw 
Swiftly, oh swiftly ! from our gaze withdraw, 
All saving Carmel's rugged crests, and those 
But as a wave on the horizon rose. 
When suddenly a sharp cry toward us drifted. 
\\e turned, and saw a maid with arms uplifted. 

" ' Oh, take me with you ! ' cried she in distress ; 
' Oh, take me in the bark, my mistresses, 
With you ! I, too, must die for Jesus' sake ! ' 
It was our handmaid Sarah thus who spake. 
Up there in heaven, whither she is gone, 
She shineth sweetly as an April dawn ! 

" Seaward before the wind our vessel drave. 
Then God a thought unto Salome gave : 



THE SAINTS. 161 

Her veil upon the foamy deep she threw, 
Oh, wondrous faith ! and on the water, blue 
And white commingling wildly, it sustained 
The maid until our fragile craft she gained, 

" To her as well the strong breeze lending aid. 
Now saw we in the hazy distance fade, 
Hill-top by hill-top, our dear native land ; 
The sea encompassed us on every hand ; 
And a sharp home-sickness upon us fell, 
The pangs whereof he who hath felt may tell. 

" So must we say farewell, O sacred shore ! 

O doomed Judaea, farewell evermore ! 

Thy just are banished, thy God crucified ! 

Henceforth let serpents in thy halls abide ; 

And wandering lions, tawny, terrible, 

Feed on thy vines and dates. Farewell ! farewell ! 

" The gale had grown into a tempest now : 
The vessel fled before it. On the prow 
Martial was kneeling, and Saturnius : 
While, in his mantle folded, Trophimus 
The aged saint silently meditated ; 
And Maximin the bishop near him waited. 

" High on the main-deck Lazarus held his place. 
There was an awful pallor on his face, 
Hues of the winding-sheet and of the grave. 
He seemed to face the anger of the wave. 
Martha his sister to his side had crept, 
And Magdalene behind them cowered and wept. 

" The slender bark, pursued of demons thus, 

Contained, beside, Cleon, Eutropius, 

Marcellus, Joseph of Arimathea, 

Sidonius. And sweet it was to hear 

The psalms they sang on the blue waste of sea, 

Leaned o'er the tholes. Te Deum, too, said we. 



1 62 MlREIO. 

" How rushed the boat the sparkling billows by ! 
E'en yet that sea seems present to the eye. 
The breeze, careering, on the waters hurled, 
Whereby the snowy spray was tossed and whirled, 
And lifted in light wreaths into the air, 
That soared like souls aloft, and vanished there. 

" Out of the waves at morning rose the Sun, 
And set therein when his day's course was run. 
Mere waifs were we upon the briny plain, 
The sport of all the winds that scour the main ; 
Yet of our God withheld from all mischance, 
That we might bear His gospel to Provence. 

" At last there came a morning still and bright. 
We noted how, with lamp in hand, the night 
Most like an anxious widow from us fled, 
Risen betimes to turn her household bread 
Within the oven. Ocean seemed as napping, 
The languid waves the boatside barely tapping. 

' Till a dull, bellowing noise assailed the ear. 
Unknown before, it chilled our blood to hear. 
And next we marked a strange, upheaving motion 
Upon the utmost limit of the ocean, 
And, stricken speechless by the gathering roar, 
Helplessly gazed the troubled waters o'er. 

" Then saw we all the deep with horror lower, 
As the swift squall descended in its power ; 
The waves drop dead still, 'twas a portent fell ; 
The bark hang motionless, as by a spell 
Entranced ; and far away, against the skies, 
A mountain of black water seemed to rise, 

"And all the heaped-up sea, with vapour crested, 
To burst upon our vessel, thus arrested. 



THE SAINTS. 163 

God, 'twas an awful hour ! One monster wave 
Seemed thrusting us into a watery grave, 
Fainting to death. Or ever it closed o'er us, 
The next upon a dizzy height upbore us. 

' ' The lightning cleft the gloom with blades of fire ; 
Peal followed peal of thunder, deafening, dire. 
It was as if all hell had been unchained 
Upon our tiny craft, which groaned and strained 
So hunted, and seemed rushing on her wreck, 
And smote our foreheads with, her heaving deck. 

" Now rode we on the shoulders of the main ; 

Now sank into its inky gulfs again, 

Where the seal dwelleth and the mignty shark, 

And the sea-peacock ; and we seemed to hark 

To the sad cry, lifted unceasingly, 

By the unresting victims of the sea. 

" A great wave brake above us, and hope died. 
Then Lazarus prayed : ' O Lord, be thou our guide, 
Who me ere now out of the tomb didst bring ! 
Succour the bark, for she is foundering ! ' 
Like a wood-pigeon's wing, this outcry clove 
The tempest, and went up to realms above. 

" And Jesus, looking from the palace fair 
Where he sat throned, beheld his friend's despair, 
And the fierce deep yawning to swallow him. 
Straightway the Master's gentle eyes grew dim, 
His heart yearned over us with pity warm, 
And one long sun-ray leaped athwart the storm. 

" Now God be praised ! For, though we yet were tost 
Right roughly up and down, and sank almost 
With bitter sea-sickness, our fears were stayed : 
The haughty waves began to be allayed ; 
Clouds brake afar, then vanished altogether, 
And a green shore gleamed through the bright'ning 
weather. 



164 



" Long was it yet ere the shocks quite subsided 
Of the tempestuous waves ; and our boat glided 
Our crazy boat, nearer that welcome shore 
All tranquilly, a dying breeze before. 
Smooth as a grebe our keel the breakers clomb, 
Furrowing into great flakes the snowy foam. 

" Until once more all glory be to God ! 

Upon a rockless beach we safely trod, 

And knelt on the wet sand, and cried, ' O Thou 

Who saved from sword and tempest, hear our vow ! 

Each one of us is an evangelist 

Thy law to preach. We swear it, O Lord Christ ! ' 

" At that great name, that cry till then unheard, 
Noble Provence, wert thou not deeply stirred ? 
Thy woods and fields, in all their fair extent, 
Thrilled with the rapture of a sweet content ; 
As a dog scents his master's coming feet, 
And flies with bounding welcome him to meet. 

" Thou, Heavenly Father, also didst provide 

A feast of shell-fish, stranded by the tide, 

To stay our hunger ; and, to quench our thirst, 

Madest among the salicornes outburst 

The same clear, healing spring, which flows alway 

Inside the church where sleeps our dust to-day. 

" Glowing with zeal, we track the shingly Rhone 
From moor to moor. In faith we travel on 
Until right gladly we discern the traces 
Of human husbandry in those wild places, 
And soon, afar, the tall Arlesian towers, 
Crowned by the standard of the emperors. 

" To-day, fair Aries, a harvester thou seemest, 
Who sleepest on thy threshing-floor, and dreamest 



THE SAINTS. 165 

Of glories past ; but a queen wert thou then, 
And mother of so brave sea-faring men, 
The noisy winds themselves aye lost their way 
In the great harbour where thy shipping lay. 

" Rome had arrayed thee in white marble newly, 
As an imperial princess decked thee duly. 
Thy brow a crown of stately columns wore ; 
The gates of thy arena were sixscore ; 
Thou hadst thy theatre and hippodrome, 
So to make mirth in thy resplendent home ! 

" We pass within the gates. A crowd advances 
Toward the theatre, with songs and dances. 
We join them ; and the eager thousands press 
Through the cool colonnades of palaces ; 
As. thou, mayhap, a mighty flood hast seen 
Rush through a maple-shaded, deep ravine. 

"Arrived, oh, shame and sorrow ! we saw there 

On the proscenium, with bosoms bare, 

Young maidens waltzing to a languid lyre, 

And high refrain sung by a shrill-voiced choir. 

They in the mazes of their dance surrounded 

A marble shape, whose name like ' Venus ' sounded. 

" The frenzied populace its clamour adds 
Unto the cries of lasses and of lads, 
Who shout their idol's praises o'er and o'er, 
' Hail to the Venus, of joy the bestower ! 
Hail to thee, Venus, goddess of all grace ! 
Mother of earth and of the Arlesian race ! ' 

" The statue, myrtle-crowned, with nostrils wide 

And head high-borne, appears to swell with pride 

Amid the incense-clouds ; when suddenly, 

In horror of so great audacity, 

Leaps Trophimus amid the maddened wretches, 

And o'er the bewildered throng his arms outstretches. 



1 66 MIREIO. 

" ' People of Aries ! ' in mighty tones he cried, 
1 Hear me, even for the sake of Christ who died 
No more. But, smitten by his shaggy frown, 
The idol groaned and staggered, and fell down, 
Headlong, from off its marble pedestal. 
Fell, too, the awe-struck dancers, one and all. 

" Therewith went up, as 'twere, a single howl 
Choked were the gateways with a rabble foul, 
Who filled all Aries with terror and dismay, 
So that patricians tore their crowns away ; 
And all the enraged youth closed round us there, 
While flashed a thousand poniards in the air. 

" Yet they recoiled ; whether it were the sight 

Of us, in our salt-crusted robes bedight ; 

Or Trophimus' calm brow which beamed on them, 

As wreathed with a celestial diadem ; 

Or tear-veiled Magdalene, who stood between us, 

How tenfold fairer than their sculptured Venus ! 

" And the old saint resumed : ' Arlesian men, 
Hear ye my message first ; and slay me then, 
If need be. Ye have seen your goddess famed 
Shiver like glass when my God was but named : 
Deem not, Arlesians, that the thing was wrought 
By my poor, feeble voice ; for we are naught. 

" 'The God who thus your idol smote, but now 
No lofty temple hath on the hill's brow ; 
But Day and Night see him alone up there ! 
And stern to sin, but generous to prayer, 
Is he ; and he hath made, with his own hand, 
The sky, the sea, the mountains, and the land. 

" ' One day he saw, from his high dwelling-place, 
All his good things devoured by vermin base ; 



THE SAINTS. 167 

Slaves who drank hatred with their tears, and had 
No comforter ; and Evil, priestly clad, 
At altars keeping school ; and, in the street, 
Maids who ran out the libertines to meet. 

" ' Wherefore, to purge this vileness, and to end 
Man's torment and our pilloried race befriend, 
He sent his own Son out of heaven down. 
Naked and poor, wearing no golden crown, 
He came, was of a virgin born, and saw 
The daylight first pillowed on stable-straw. 

" ' People of Aries, turn to this lowly One. 
Ourselves can show the wonders he hath done, 
Who were his comrades ; and, in that far land 
Where rolls the yellow Jordan, saw him stand, 
In his white linen robe, amid the crowd, 
Who him assailed with maledictions loud. 

" ' Full gentle was his message : for he showed 
That men should love each other, and that God 
Is both almighty and all merciful ; 
And that the kingdom where he beareth rule 
Descendeth not to tyrants, cheats, and scorners, 
But to the poor, the lowly, and the mourners. 

" ' These were his teachings : and he them attested 
By walking on the waters ; and arrested 
Sickness most bitter by a glance, a word. 
The dead, by yon grim rampart undeterred, 
Came back to earth. This Lazarus whom you see 
Once rotted in the grave. But jealousy 

" ' Inflamed the bad hearts of the Jewish kings. 
They led him to a mountain for these things, 
And cruelly unto a tree trunk nailed, 
Spat on the sacred face, and coarsely railed 
And lifted him on high.' Here all the throng 
Brake into loud lament and sobbing strong. 



i68 MiRfcio. 

" ' Mercy,' they cried, ' for our iniquities ! 
What shall we do the Father to appease ? 
Answer us, man of God ! If blood must fiow, 
He shall have hecatombs." 'Ah, no ! ah, no ! ' 
Replied the saint ; ' but slay before the Father 
Your vices and your evil passions rather ! ' 

" So knelt, and prayed : ' Lord, thou dost not desire 

Odour of slaying, sacrificial fire, 

Or stately temples ! Dearer far to thee 

Is the bread given to those who fainting be ; 

Or sweet girl's timid coming, who doth bring 

Her pure heart, like a May-flower, to her king.' 

" As o'er the Apostle's lips, like sacred oil, 
The word of God was flowing, 'gan recoil 
The idols everywhere, and plunged at last 
Adown the temple stairs ; while tears dropped fast, 
And rich and poor and working-men all ran 
To kiss the garment of the holy man. 

" Then bare Sidonius witness. In his night 
He was born blind he led to the true light 
The men of Aries. And Maximin, beside, 
The resurrection of the Crucified 
Set forth, and bade them turn from sin away. 
Aries was baptized upon that very day. 

" Then the Lord's breath did speed us in our going, 
Like wind upon a fire of shavings blowing ; 
For, as we turned of these to take farewell, 
Came messengers, before our feet who fell, 
And passionately cried, ' O god-sent strangers ! 
Hear yet the story of our cruel dangers. 

' 'To our unhappy city came the sound 
Of marvels wrought and oracles new found. 



THE SAINTS. 169 

She sends us hither. We are dead who stand 
Before you ! Such a monster wastes our land ! 
A scourge of God, greedy of human gore, 
It haunts our woods and gorges. We implore 

" ( Your help. The monster hath a dragon's tail, 

Bristles its back with many a horrid scale. 

It hath six human feet, and fleet they are ; 

A lion's jaw ; eyes red like cinnabar. 

Its prey it hideth in a cavern lone, 

Under a rock that beetles o'er the Rhone. 

" ' Now day by day our fishermen grow few 
And fewer.' Saying this, they wept anew 
And bitterly, the men of Tarascon. 
Then maiden Martha said, serene and strong, 
' Ready am I, and my heart yearns with pity. 
Marcellus, haste : we two will save the city ! ' 

" For the last time on earth we did embrace, 
With hope of meeting in a happy place, 
And parted. Martial to Limoges him hied, 
While fair Toulouse became Saturnius' bride : 
And our Eutropius the new cause did plead, 
And sow, in brave Orange, the blessed seed. 

1 ' And thou, sweet virgin, whither goest thou ? 
With step unfaltering and untroubled brow, 
Martha her cross and holy-water carried 
Against the dragon dire, and never tarried. 
The wild men clomb the pine-trees round about, 
The fray to witness and the maiden's rout. 

" Startled from slumber in his darksome cave, 
Thou shouldst have seen the leap the monster gave 
Yet vainly writhed he 'neath the holy dew, 
And growled and hissed as Martha near him drew, 
Bound with a frail moss-halter, and forth led 
Snorting. Then all the people worshipped. 
H 



170 Mmfcio. 

" ' Huntress Diana art thou ? ' prostrate falling 
Before the Christian maid, began they calling ; 
'Or yet Minerva, the all-wise and chaste? ' 
' Nay, nay ! ' the damsel answered in all haste : 
' I am God's handmaid only.' And the crowd 
She taught until with her to Him they bowed. 

" Then by the power of her young voice alone, 
She smote Avignon's rock ; and from the stone 
Welled faith in so pellucid stream, that, later, 
Clements and Gregories in that fair water 
Dipped holy chalices their thirst to slake, 
And Rome long years did for her glory quake. 

"And all Provence, regenerate, sang so clear 
A hymn of praise, that God was glad to hear. 
Hast thou not marked, when rain begins to fall, 
How spring the drooping trees and grasses all, 
How soon the foliage with joy will quiver ? 
So fevered souls drank of this cooling river ! 

" Thou fair Marseilles, who openest on the sea 
Thy haughty eyes and gazest languidly, 
As though naught else were worthy to behold, 
And, though the winds rage, dreamest but of gold, 
When Lazarus preached to thee, thou didst begin 
Those eyes to close, and see the night within, 

" And to the sources of that river speeding, 

That aye the tears of Magdalene were feeding, 

Didst wash thy sins away : and in this hour 

Art proud once more ; but other storms may lower. 

Forget not, then, amid thy revelries, 

Whose tears they are that bathe thine olive-trees ! 

" Dark cedars that on Mount Sambuco grew, 
Sheer ledges of the hills of Aix, and you, 



THE SAINTS. 171 

Tall pines, clothing the flanks of Esterel, 

And junipers of Trevaresso, tell 

How thrilled your vales with joy, when, his cross bearing. 

The bishop Maximin was through them faring. 

" Seest thou one with white arms on her breast, 
Who kneels and prays in yonder grotto, dressed 
In the bright garment of her floating hair ? 
Poor sufferer ! Her tender knees are bare, 
And cruelly by the sharp flints are torn. 
The moon, with pale torch, watches the forlorn 

"And sad recluse. The woods in silence bow. 
The angels hush their very heart-throbs now, 
As, gazing through a crevice, they espy 
A pearly tear fall from the lifted eye, 
And haste the precious gem to gather up, 
And keep for ever in a golden cup. 

" Enough, O Magdalene ! Thirty years ago, 
The wind that in the forest whispers low 
Bare thee the pardon of the Man divine ! 
The tears that the rock weeps are tears of thine. 
These, like a snowfall softly sprinkled o'er, 
Shall whiten woman's love for ever more ! 

" But naught can stay the mourner's gnawing grief. 

Even the little birds bring not relief, 

That flock around her, building many a nest 

On Saint Pilon ; nor spirits of the blest, 

Who lift and rock her in their arms of love, 

And soar, seven times a day, the vales above. 

" O Lord, be thine the glory ! And may we 
In thy full brightness and reality 
Behold thee ever ! Poor and fugitive, 
We women did of thy great grace receive. 



172 MlREIO. 

We, even we, touched by thy love supernal, 
Shed some faint reflex of the light eternal. 

" Ye, Alpine peaks and all blue hills of Baux, 
Unto the latest hour of time will show 
The traces of our teaching carved in stone ! 
And so Death found us on the marshes lone, 
Deep in Camargue, encircled by the sea, 
And from our day's long labour set us free. 

"And as, on earth, haste all things to decay, 

Faded the memory of our tombs away. 

While sang Provence her songs, and time rolled on, 

Till, as Durance is blended with the Rhone, 

Ended the merry kingdom of Provence, 

And fell asleep upon the breast of France. 

" ' France, take thy sister by the hand ! ' So saith 
Our land's last king, he drawing near to death. 
' On the great work the future hath in store, 
Together counsel take ! Thou art the more 
Strong ; she, the more fair : and rebel night 
Before your wedded glory shall take flight.' 

" This did Rene. Therefore we sought I he king, 
As on his feathers he lay slumbering, 
And showed the spot where long our bones had lain ; 
And he, with bishops twelve and courtly train, 
Came down into this waste of sand and waves, 
And found, among the salicornes, our graves. 

" Adieu, dear Mireio ! The hour flies ; 

And, like a taper's flame before it dies, 

We see life's light within thy body flicker. 

Yet, ere the soul is loosed, come quick, oh quicker, 

My sisters ! we the hills of heaven must scale 

Or ever she arrive within the veil. 



THE SAINTS. 173 

" Roses and a white robe we must prepare ! 

She is love's martyr and a virgin fair 

Who dies to-day ! With sweetest flowers blow, 

Celestial paths ! and on Mireio 

Shine saintly splendours of the heavenly host ! 

Glory to Father, Son, and Holy Ghost ! " 



CANTO XII. 
Death. 

AS, when in orange-lands God's day is ending, 
The maids let fly the leafy boughs, and, lending 
A helpful hand, the laden baskets lift 
On head or hip, and fishing-boats adrift 
Are drawn ashore, and, following the sun, 
The golden clouds evanish, one by one ; 

As the full harmonies of eventide, 

Swelling from hill and plain and river-side 

Along the sinuous Argens, airy notes 

Of pastoral pipe, love-songs, and bleat of goats, 

Grow fainter, and then wholly fade away, 

And sombre night falls on the mountains gray ; 

Or as the last sigh of an anthem soft, 

Or dying organ-peal, is borne aloft 

O'er some old church, and on the wandering wind 

Passes afar, so passed the music twined 

Of the three Maries' voices, heavenward carried. 

For her, she seemed asleep ; for yet she tarried 

Kneeling : and was more fair than ever now, 
So strange a freak of sunlight crowned her brow. 
And here they who had sought her through the wild, 
The aged parents, came, and found their child ; 
Yet stayed their faltering steps the portal under, 
To gaze on her entranced with awe and wonder ; 



DEATH. 175 

Then crossed their foreheads with the holy water, 

And, hasting o'er the sounding flags, besought her 

To wake. But, as a frighted vireo 

Who spies the huntsman, shrieked Mireio, 

" O God, what is it ? Father, mother, tell ! 

Where will you go ? " And therewith swooned and fell. 

The weeping mother lifts her head, and yearns 
Over her. " My sweet, your forehead burns ! 
What means it ? " And again, " No dream is this. 
My own sweet child, my very own it is, 
Low lying at my feet ! " And then she wept 
And laughed together ; and old Ramoun crept 

Beside them. "Little darling, it is I, 
Your father, has your hand ! " Then suddenly 
His anguish choked him, and he could but hold 
And chafe and strive to warm those fingers cold. 
Meanwhile the wind the mournful tidings bore 
Abroad, and all Li Santo thronged the door, 

And anxiously. " Bear the sick child," they say, 

' ' Into the upper chapel, nor delay ; 

And let her touch the dear Saints' relics thus 

Within their reliquaries marvellous ; 

Or kiss, at least, with dying lips ! " And there 

Two women raised, and bore her up the stair. 

In this fair church, altars and chapels three, 

Built one upon the other, you may see, 

Of solid stone. In that beneath the ground 

The dusky gypsies kneel, with awe profound, 

Before Saint Sarah. One is over it 

That hath God's altar. And one higher yet, 

On pillars borne, last of the sanctuaries, 
The small, funereal chapel of the Maries, 



176 MlREIO. 

With heavenward vault. And here long years have lain 
Rich legacy, whence falleth grace like rain ! 
The ever-blessed relics. Four great keys 
Enlock the cypress chests that shelter these. 

Once are they opened in each hundred years ; 
And happy, happy shall he be who nears 
And sees and touches them ! Upon the wave 
Bright star and weather fair his bark shall have, 
His trees be with abundant fruitage graced, 
His faithful soul eternal blessing taste ! 

An oaken door, with carvings rich and rare, 
Gift of the pious people of Beaucaire, 
Closes the holy precinct. And yet surely 
That which defends is not the portal purely, 
Is not the circling rampart ; but the grace 
Descending from the azure depths of space. 

So to the chapel bare they the sick child, 
While up the winding stair the folk defiled ; 
And, as a white-robed priest threw wide the door, 
They, entering, fell on the dusty floor, 
As falls full-bearded barley when a squall 
Hath smitten it, and worshipped one and all. 

" O lovely Saints 1 O friendly Saints ! " they said, 
" O Saints of God, pity this poor young maid ! " 
" Pity her ! " sobbed the mother. " I will bring, 
When she is well, so fair an offering ! 
My flower-carved cross, my golden ring ! " she cried, 
"And tell the tale through town and country-side ! " 

" O Saints," groaned Ramoun, stumbling in the gloom 
While shook his aged head, " be kind, and come ! 
Look on this little one ! She is my treasure ! 
She is my plover 1 Pretty beyond measure, 
And good and meet for life ! Send my old bones 
To dung the mallows, but save her 1 " he moans. 



DEATH. 177 

And all the while Mireio lay in swoon, 
Till a breeze, with declining afternoon, 
Blew from the tamarisks. Then, hoping still 
To call her back to life, they raised with skill, 
The flower of Lotus Farm, and tenderly 
Laid on the tiles that overlook the sea. 

There, from the doorway leading on the tiles, 
The chapel's eye, one's vision roams for miles, 
Even to the pallid limit of the brine, 
The blending and the separating line 
Between the clouds and waters to explore, 
And the great waves that roll for evermore. 

Insensate and unceasing and untiring, 
They follow one another on ; expiring, 
With sullen roar, amid the drifted sand : 
While vast savannas, on the other hand, 
Stretch till they meet a heaven without a stain, 
Unfathomed blue over unmeasured plain. 

Only a light-green tamarisk, here and there, 

Quivering in the faintest breath of air, 

Or a long belt of salicornes, appears, 

With swans that dip them in the desert meres, 

With oxen roaming the waste moor at large; 

Or swimming Vacares from marge to marge. 

At last the maiden murmured, but how weak 

The voice ! how vague the words ! " On either cheek 

I seem to feel a breeze, one from the sea, 

One from the land : and this refreshes me 

Like morning airs ; but that doth sore oppress 

And burn me, and is full of bitterness. " 

So ceased. The people of Li Santo turn 
Blankly from plain to ocean : then discern 



178 



A lad who nears them, at so fleet a pace 
The dust in clouds is raised ; and, in the race 
Outstripped, the tamarisks are growing small, 
And far behind the runner seem to fall. 

Vincen it was. Ah, poor unhappy youth ! 

When Master Ambroi spake that sorry truth, 

" My son, the pretty little lotus-spray 

Is not for you ! " he turned, and fled away ; 

From Valabrego like a bandit fled, 

To see her once again. And when they said 

In Crau, " She in Li Santo must be sought," 

Rhone, marshes, weary Crau, withheld him not ; 

Nor stayed he ever in his frantic search 

Till, seeing that great throng inside the church, 

He rose on tiptoe deadly pale, and crying, 

" Where is she?" And they answered, " She is dying 

" Above there in the chapel." In despair 

And all distraught, he hurried up the stair ; 

But, when his eye fell on the prostrate one, 

Threw his hands wildly up. " What have I done, 

What have I done against my God and hers 

To call down on me such a heavy curse 

" From Heaven? Have I cut the throat of her 
Who gave me birth ? or at a church taper 
Lighted my pipe ? or dared I, like the Jews, 
The holy crucifix 'mong thistles bruise ? 
What is it, thou accursed year of God, 
Why must I bear so terrible a load ? 

" 'Twas not enough my darling they denied 
To me ! They've hunted her to death ! " he cried ; 
And then he knelt, and kissed her passionately ; 
And all the people, when they saw how greatly 
His heart was wrung, felt theirs too swell with pain, 
And wept aloud above the stricken twain. 



DEATH. 179 

Then, as the sound of many waters, falling 

Far down a rocky valley, rises calling 

Unto the shepherd high the hills among, 

Rose from the church a sound of full-choired song, 

And all the temple trembled with the swell 

Of that sweet psalm the Santen sing so well : 

" Saints of God, ere now sea-faring 

On these briny plains of ours, 
Who have set a temple bearing 

Massy walls and snowy towers, 

" Watch the wave-tossed seaman kindly ; 

Lend him aid the bark to guide ; 
Send him fair winds, lest he blindly 

Perish on the pathless tide ! 

" See the woman poor and sightless : 

Ne'er a word she uttereth ; 
Dark her days are and delightless, 

Darkness aye is worse than death. 

" Vain the spells they have told o'er her, 

Blank is all her memory. 
Queens of Paradise, restore her ! 

Touch those eyes that they may see I 

" We who are but fishers lowly, 

Lift our hearts ere forth we go ; 
Ye, the helpful saints and holy, 

Fill our nets to overflow. 

f So, when penitents heart-broken, 

Sue for pardon at your door, 
Flood their souls with peace unspoken, 

White flowers of our briny moor ! " 



180 MIREIO. 

So prayed the Santen, with tears and strong crying. 

Then came the patrons to the maid low-lying, 

And breathed a little life into her frame ; 

So that her wan eyes brightened, and there came 

A tender flush of joy her visage over, 

At the sweet sight of Vincen bent over her. 

" Why love, whence came you ? Do you mind, I pray, 
A word you said down at the Farm one day, 
Walking under the trellis, by my side ? 
You said, ' If ever any harm betide, 
Hie thee right quickly to the holy Saints, 
Who cure all ills and hearken all complaints." 

" Dearest, I would you saw my heart this minute, 
As in a glass, and all the comfort in it ! 
Comfort and peace like a full fountain welling 
Through all my happy spirit 1 There's no telling 
A grace beyond my uttermost desires 1 
Look, Vincen : see you not God's angel- choirs? " 

Pausing, she gazed into the deep blue air. 
It was as if she could discern up there 
Wonderful things hidden from mortal men. 
But soon her dreamy speech began again : 
" Ah, they are happy, happy souls that soar 
Aloft, tethered by flesh to earth no more I 

" Did you mark, Vincen dear, the flakes of light 
That fell when they began their heavenward flight ? 
If all their words to me had written been, 
They would have made a precious book, I ween." 
Here Vincen, who had striven his tears to stay, 
Brake forth in sobs, and gave his anguish way. 

" Would to God I had seen them ere they went ! 
Ah, would to God ! Then to their white raiment, 



DEATH. 181 

Like a tick fastening, I would have cried, 
' O queens of heaven ! Sole ark where we may bide, 
In this late hour, do what you will with me 1 
Maimed, sightless, toothless, I would gladly be ; 

" ' But leave my pretty little fairy sane 

And sound ! ' " Here brake Mireio in again : 

" There are they, in their linen robes of grace ! 

They come ! " and from her mother's fond embrace 

Began to struggle wildly to be free, 

And waved her hand afar toward the sea. 

Then all the folk turned also to the main, 

And under shading hands their eyes 'gan strain ; 

Yet, save the pallid limit of the brine, 

The blending and the separating line 

'Twixt wave and vault, they nothing could descry. 

" Naught cometh," said they. But the child, " Oh, ay I 

" Look closer ! There's a bark, without a sail, 
Wafted toward us by a gentle gale, 
And they are on it ! And the swell subsides 
Before them, and the bark so softly glides ! 
Clear is the air and all the sea like glass, 
And the sea-birds do homage as they pass ! " 

" Poor child ! she wanders," murmured they ; "for we 

See only the red sunset on the sea ! " 

" Yet it is they ! Mine eyes have told me true," 

The sick one panted " 'Tis the boat in view I 

Now low, now lifted, it is drawing near, 

Oh, miracle of God ! the boat is here ! " 

Now was she paling, as a marguerite 
Half-blown and smitten by a tropic heat, 
While crouching Vincen, horror in his heart, 
Or ere his well-beloved quite depart 
Hath her in charge unto our Lady given, 
To the Saints of the chapel and of heaven. 



182 Mmfcio. 

Lit are the tapers, and, in violet stole 
Begirt, the priest, to stay the passing soul, 
Lays angel's bread to those dry lips of hers, 
And the last unction so administers ; 
Then of her body the seven parts anoints 
With holy oil, as holy church appoints. 

The hour was calm. Upon the tiles no word 

Save the oremus of the priest was heard. 

The last red shaft of the declining day 

Struck on the wall and passed, and heaven turned gray. 

The sea's long waves came slowly up the shore, 

Brake with a murmur soft, and were no more. 

Beside the maid knelt father, mother, lover, 
And hoarsely sobbed at intervals above her ; 
Till once again her lips moved, and she spake : 
" Now is the parting close at hand ! So take 
My hand, and press it quickly, dears. Lo, now 
The glory grows on either Mary's brow ! 

" The pink flamingoes flock from the Rhone shore, 

The tamarisks in blossom all adore. 

The dear Saints beckon me to them," she said. 

" They tell me I need never be afraid : 

They know the constellations of the skies ; 

Their bark will take us quick to Paradise ! " 

" My little pet," said Ramoun, quite undone, 

" You will not go, and leave the home so lone ! 

Why have I felled my oaks with such ado? 

The zeal that nerved me only came of you. 

If the hot sun on sultry glebe o'ertook me, 

I thought of you, and heat and thirst forsook me." 

" Dear father, if a moth shall sometime fly 
About your lamp at night, that will be I. 



DEATH. i 

But see ! the Saints are standing on the prow ! 
They wait. I'm coming in a moment now ! 
Slowly I move, good Saints, for I am ailing." 
" It is too much 1 " the mother brake out, wailing. 

" Oh, stay with me ! I cannot let you die. 
And, when you're well, Mireio, by and by 
We'll go some day to Aunt Aurano's, dear, 
And carry pomegranates. Do you hear ? 
Maiano is not distant from our home ; 
And, in one day, one may both go and come. " 

"Not very distant, mother, that I know; 
But all alone thou wilt the journey go ! 
Now give me my white raiment, mother mine. 
Oh, how the mantles of the Maries shine ! 
Sawest thou ever such a dazzling sight ? 
The snow upon the hillsides is less white ! " 

" O thou," cried the dark weaver, "who didst ope 

The palace of thy love to me, my hope, 

My queen, my all ! A blossoming alms thou gavest ; 

The mire of my low life in thine thou lavest, 

Till it shines like a mirror, and dost place 

Me in eternal honour by thy grace. 

" Pearl of Provence ! of my young days the sun ! 

Shall it be ever said of such an one, 

I saw upon her forehead the death-dew ? 

Shall it be said, puissant Saints, of you, 

You looked unmoved upon her mortal pain, 

Letting her clasp your sacred sill in vain? " 

Slowly the maiden answered, " My poor friend, 

What is it doth affright you, and offend ? 

Believe me, dear, the thing that we call death 

Is a delusion. Lo ! it vanisheth, 

As a fog when the bells begin their pealing ; 

As dreams with daylight through the window stealing. 



184 MIREIO. 

" I am not dying ! See, I mount the boat 
With a light foot ! And now we are afloat ! 
Good-by 1 good-by ! We are drifting out to sea. 
The waves encompass us, and needs must be 
The very avenue to Paradise, 
For all around they touch the azure skies ! 

" Gently they rock us now. And overhead 

So many stars are shining ! Ah," she said, 

" Among those worlds one surely may be found 

Where two may love in peace ! Hark, Saints, that 

sound ! 

Is it an organ played across the deep ? " 
Then sighed, and fell, as it had been, asleep. 

And, by her smiling lips, you might have guessed 
That yet she spake. Only the Santen pressed 
About the sleeper in a mournful band, 
And, with a taper passed from hand to hand, 
Signed the cross o'er her. While, as turned to stone, 
The parents gazed on what themselves had done. 

To them her form is all enrayed wiih light. 
Vainly they feel her cold, they see her white : 
The awful stroke they comprehend not now. 
But, soon as Vincen marked the level brow, 
The rigid arms, the sweet eyes wholly veiled, 
" See you not she is dead ? " he loudly wailed. 

"Quite dead?" And therewith fiercely wrung his 

hands, 

As he of old had wrung the osier-strands, 
And threw his naked arms abroad. " My own ! " 
He cried, " they will not weep for you alone : 
With yours, the trunk of my life too they fell. 
' Dead ' was I saying ? 'Tis impossible : 



DEATH. 185 

" A demon whispered me the word, no doubt ! 
Tell me, in God's name, ye who stand about, 
Ye who have seen dead women ere to-day, 
If, passing through the gates, they smile that way. 
Her look is well-nigh merry, do you see ? 
Why do they turn their heads away from me, 

" And weep ? This means, I think, that all is o'er. 

Her pretty prattle I shall hear no more : 

Still is the voice I loved ! " All hearts were thrilled ; 

Tears rushed like rain, and sobs would not be stilled. 

One sound went up of weeping and lament, 

Till the waves on the beach returned the plaint. 

So when in some great herd a heifer dies., 
About the carcass where it starkly lies 
Nine following eves the beasts take up their station, 
And seem to mourn after their speechless fashion ; 
The sea, the plain, the winds, thereover blowing, 
Echo nine days with melancholy lowing, 

" Poor Master Ambroi ! " Vincen wandered on, 
' ' Thou wilt weep heavy tears over thy son ! 
And now, good Santen, one last wish is mine, 
Bury me with my love, below the brine ; 
Scoop in the oozy sand a crib for two : 
Tears for so great a mourning will not do. 

" And a stone wall about the basin set, 

So the sea flow not in, and part us yet ! 

Santen, I trust you ! Then, while they are beating 

Their brows, and with remorse her name repeating, 

There at the farm where her home used to be, 

Far from the unrest of the upper sea, 

" Down in the peaceful blue we will abide, 
My oh so pretty, alway side by side ; 
I 



1 86 MlRElO. 

And you shall tell me of your Maries over, 
Over, until with shells the great storms cover." 
Here the crazed weaver on the corse him threw, 
And from the church arose the psalm anew. 



" So, when penitents heart-broken 

Sue for pardon at your door, 
Flood their souls with peace unspoken, 
White flowers of our briny moor ! " 



UNWIN BROTHERS, 
CMILWORTH AND L.ONDON. 



DATE DUE 



GAYUORD 



PRINTED IN U.S.A. 




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